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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1862-04-29

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1862-04-29 page 1

PJitladelphla IdTortUlaa;. T; Mil. BAKER & CO., , BUNK, BAIOUBt ' ' iMfuriu in iimim o ioo: 1 1 j . FANOY DRY GOODS I BILKS, PRESS GOODB, SLOTHS, OASSr. MEBE8 AND VK8TINGB, WHITE 000D8 AMP EMBROIDERIES, LINENS, HO--," BIERY AND; NOIipNS, , ;- No 137 North Third street, -C PHILADELPHIA. " ,7 mare-dam , r,UB OHIOB.' Arab ItrHt'akm Third, Philadelphia VFTOHS. MBWCOMER, Fropritler. eTTbls Botct omtral, convenient by Peeeiiigii rj7u all perl, of the eitr, ul In everv "r"l1r Jj.M to tli. comlurt ul wants of tko dmIm. Dibtic EVANS & NASSAU, MILITARY FURNISHERS, No. 418 Arch Street, pSIIjAIJHiiP: BILK AND BUNTING FLAGS, PRESENTATION FLAGS, REGIMENTAL FLAGS, J ; EMBROIDERIES, SV '; 33stci-tll3tioca. 1881. kill W. WAI80H. j oh aim iwa WM- M'OUJJLY & GO..1 MAHUrACTDIIKi Of DRUGGISTS' GLASSWARE, Black Bottles, DeUhns, AMD Window ..Olassi AT IBB PITTSBURGH, PHOJNIX, SLIQO A EMPIRE . GLASS FACTORIES, . t a PITTSBURGH, PA, Fancy Printing At Engraving. .sinking, Engraving, iiPnnoy Xx-ixatlxxa;, By A. eV G.'McCUBMENT, ... ail Chesnnt St,, Philadelphia, JBNVElOrEa, BUSINESS' CARDS,' LABELS, $c, either Tinted of Embotted: SEAL PRESSES, PATENT SELF INKING PRESSES knd HAND STAMPS neatly , - executed. - KV"Ordvi promptly Atundcd tiia' 1 A i '.s'i fc. :l reer.-iISm ' If Oruga, Etc. . JOHN C. SAVERT, . .... Wholesale Srucciat, ANDDEALEBIH '.PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, DTE STUFFS, TEB-FUMElif, PATENT MEDICINES, e , Ac. No. 80T Market Street, Philadelphia, Fa.-; - Olty and Country Pealera aupplled on the met favora-b!,wm Orden by mall promptly attended to. .. mar4 t3m - - milts n r. i.ouitv. dbbhtniit itaikt, X betw. en Third end Fourth, Pbllad.lphla. The nnderalgo. d, havlu leaned, for a term of yean, thla popnUr honto, hve the plennue of announcing to their friend, and the traveling community that It 1. now onan for the rco-ptlon of giuata. Tfi. hoaee .Inoe the flr.tor alerob butt, hae been entirely wuovated and re lilted In a anpsilnr manner; tha aparlnanta Are large, well ventl'eted and fnrnlahud In modem .lyle. It la ooo-trally located, o mvenlcnt to all the dopot end ateaniboat Luullage, and In tue Immediate vicinity of , the Ctaltom Boom, Poet llftVo and tbeO-trn Exchange. - tionnoeto I icb the Hotel la a B eteuvant for the accent-miction uf tii-tee preferring tbe Europe tu plan. Prtcea of Boom, from Three to ttevea Dollar, per week, accord-log to Ittoellou. . ' " , U-td 1 50 per day. Tnb'e d'Hote tot mercbente and bualneqo men from 1 to 3 P. M. 1 HEHBY NEIL, , 18AA0 L. DSVOI. eprS Steel rent.. R. FSTERBROOK & CO. , Steel Pen Manufacturers, No. 403 Arch Street,) . . jt'biladelpliiav, RsisTHiarmooiE co, dbrirb to . oall th. ntuiotlnn of the trad- and the American Fuftllc t tho hot that dtoal Poua are niala In thla eoun try oy them equal la qtullty to the be.t Imported ar. tlcloa. CITY AND COUNTRY DEALERS ; aoppllad on the moat fayotabla Icrml. . ' , Ordera by mall promptly Attandno lo. ' ' : n ' marld.Sm WM Fancy Ooodi. V ' AB1IAB T0DH4, PAV1D YODNO, H. 0. MOOBI ARMAR YOUNG. BRO. & CO.;'; IUP0BTEB3 DKAtlBSIH V' EMBROIDERIES, LACES, WTITE GOODS. HOSIERY.; ; MITTS, tiLOVKS, TRIMMINGS, &e. No. 835 Market Street, mari dSm ' . PHI1.ADBI.PHIA. LINEN BOSOMS IN EVERY BTYLB ' AND YABIETT, BY J. NICHOLSON, Nos. 101 and 103 Korth Third St.; Ttnnnne a aTrpRnlckH SOLD KB FLAX X tirn Bleached Linen, ami bare all my work made op In the beet ntauuor and.r my own .up.rn.iou, eno arery Al.o, .full line of RmtlTI), COLLARS and COfrS alvaya on hend, carelnlly made and werranbd to Btr-aud fur aula at the lort poaiibla price to Johbera, WholoKale petllaraand ttetellera. Oaeh at.d itru-.pt raying abort lime layer, are partlca. larly Invited. mari-dam awawAwjwwBwAwawMaawAwwAawAwAwaw Hardware. DAVID FAUST & C0., (Boweeeori to Faottj Wlaeirener 1 0o.,j IMPORTERS WHOLESALE DEALERS IN HaRD WARS, TMO. 49 NORTH THIRD ST.. BATTD TMJ4T, TiteH-dHta B. . tiBMAB,- , ISO. BAKOLD i . . , ... ; , . ,t.tX ' , WlanoH'S BOUBJALL OIRBAaiTa (r auhronio Natttre, ueiiainlug to the Mtl, and Fa mala flritii. Uehllltr. Feeble Ao Ion. Prematura Ter mination. Mental Atranlon. Kruplloaa, lurolnnUrf ltaeea, Atrophy, Impotence, BarrMineae, eattre aiieence or peiafnl fntictlotta and even when of twenty yedre et Uteltce. otn 0 ratttotlir ourea in a rew weeee oy m ilbm.tf,. Tkl. veaieil la no, e tneehenkel ettnll ance, neither if It a raetliolna to be laken Inlo tha etum aoh. vaf ila - tveStrt nwUte, Mkum aoeeN-ith, MpoerJeea 1 will a.nd It tor HIM1. Addree. 0. UBKWarhH, Olae , olanatl.t) Vw,P VtolHo. KM. -aprdeWl ilUC tiilaj lf.il it I, vi DAILY MIO STATM HJJIlJjJiNAJL. CJaclnaall AaJTerttBeJtng. A BATTLE HTH-FIREr',7 IUmV BttrBtct In P-urlr-usls I riVK OF HERRING'S SAFE VICTORIOUS I Tnunn Pan', Dastmbtr tl, 1MU ' Oirrwiii: At the rretfire. which ooenrrad hnre oa the llth lieMmbur lAat, myator wtb numlMr of other LulldlDra. waa entirely deatroyed; no lea. than ear en place. f btMlsea. we r. burnt oat and Ara of your aafea aavarely teetad- in ATery t- aiaooe Tiog thnir entire oooirnto. to the eoan. plela ao partMt Miuneuon oi- the njrneraj iwa 01 your aiar rtas'a Miaul llhamploo Hafea whloh wen In niy build. war I am twee mere lorou.n in. u.m end mmr net nMtid hntll tho dar After tha S A. No walar waa thrown oa tha bulUlug. Bwyikisg Id my aafe after the Are e nearly aa g- a, new. u y. WHO..X Aleo praeerred all hie book., paper, and mosey in two of your infra, both being la eaane Bra, Wia. Roberta waa aleo tha fcrluueta owner of another of yonr Patont Ohatnpios Hafea, which wea aerorely tatled, and eared completely bl.booae, papera and money. The recall haa given great aallafeolloa, and we want t o aale but Bar-riog'e bhempioA. rieaee aand ma one aama laa I la, I Muhtofyoulmmadlaieiy. Aand by n. . , h.. ion a. BOWIN. I had two of Herri at', ffaa In ahore Ara.. Jkey aared my booh,, papera and 12,000 1 Bank "'jj'-j Wj yjf) j ninnTNfl'n patkht rnAMPios aated mybooka. naoara And abont MOO lA nmcr aioaep. I would nee no WILLIAM BOUKBTd. HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION i FIRE- 1 , " PROOF EAFE8. .," ' HBBBIBO'lOHArlPIOH BUBGLAB PHOOr SATIS lined with Herring rioyd'e new Patent (Vyilaliied row. WThe only metal wblcn cannot ue ariueo. aim. iiyci.i.i Ki.iwiflHia HAirlfid. for ellrer nu nlnabla papera, Ae. Seme of elrgenl Snleh and en I table ornament, fer the Parlor and Dining-room. - JIBIiBINa AOJ.,861 Uroadwajr. ' TABBKL, BXMBthiO A CO, Pl.lUdtlpUa. BBUUINO 00., Chicago. . nurt-d3oi , haihtowioi Mrs . 0. O. Hillver. Haa been lodno-d by her frlenda to lire publicity to her Tonic, wblch hae fer yeatv been teeted and oaed by them with perfect eoooeei. Bhe theretoro counjentiy onvre it, relying on a trial only, to locomoiend it, nnlvereal dm The following ladle., with buuureua of other., which .pace will not permit to poolleh, can teetify to tha efftoacy of tha Above Vonict . , . , ' CIItOUtNATI BBIIBCKCCg. I 1. ' K Mrs Dp J t White, Hrg Dr Blacimn, John P Foot, . " E A Thompson, "BR Bate., " Df Dodge, 1 ' " ' : Dr JC Spenoor, ' " Ptep Neff, a . . " ' 0 Wiltshire, ' '' " M pomiuiok, 'u i' " D Gibaon, " AlfWood,, T W RTolle," - ' " ; Caggllly, . " f .WM UoOtBuroB' " l Wnotia. "- W A Goodman, J M Niles, J D Minnor, ' M Htnohman, Henry Nlge, J S Brown, E Taylor, t ,' ' Marshall, A M Hall, Whipple, -' irnps rjimpeoB, Mre D Taylor, .. ,..,,7,., , ' 1 :: direotYoVs. - The hair moat be combed and brained thoroughly before the Tonic 1. eoDlied Then take A email atllf brn-b and apply the Toulc to Ihe acalp, being csr.fol that tha roou of tho hair ara perfectly saturated villi it N. B. Thla la to certify that noue ere genuine unite, aigntd ' 0.0. HILLTKB, for tale by B, B. Html, ana DingtMt. generally. marSH d2m (JbirtfJ. PERFECT FITTING SHIRTS ' ' "AT THB - BOSTON SHIRT FACTORY ! I. A. KIPPNEB, Ao'r, 10t ajtzth Sjt-, betwscn Vina and Race, (OHIO MIDIOAL COLLEGI BUILDING,) CINCINNATI, 0. Eelf-MeAiaramant for Bhlrta printed direction, aenl free everywhere, and ao eatty to uutUreland that any one oan take hie Own ttreaanrf for Bhlrta. I warrant A. good It. Thecaali tobepald to the VXCroe, Oompany "a n oelpt of aooda. prlu jyILDLSTOB, 8TB0BB1DOH 00., LITHOGRAPHERS, EtSGHA-VBrtw COPPER PLATE POINTERS, 4 West Fourth St., Clrelnnatl. All kind, of worn dona In the best it? le and on abort notice: . . . Particular Attention will na grren to ortitae tur WEDDING CARDS, VISITINa CARDS, to oyar Order, may be aent to tha JoCkBU Orric-norlMIr Medical. IW MEDICAL DI80OVIRT, for tbs spoody and permanent cure of aonorrhto, Gleet, U re thai Discharges, Seminal Weakness, Nightly Emissions, Inoou-' - tlnenoe, Genital Irritability,-Gravel, Strioture, and. AFFECTIOHS OT TBS KIDNEYS AND BLADDEB, vhlcta hu ben used by upward, of ( OKU UVMORW PHYSICIAN Sf : In their private practice, wttta entlrfi snebww, itrptynetitiig Oabflbif Coptalba, 0paQMt or u7 compount) hitherto knowii. BELL'S BPECIFIO PILLS arm needr In action, often eftotlnK care In a ftw Atn, tnd when a care Is effected It li permanent, Tbey ara prepared frPJB Tegetabl eztrants that ara harmlMi on the tystem, and never naufteato the ntumach, or Impregnate the breathi and belns suirar-euated, all namteoua .taste Is Totded. iVo flfcdwff of dit it nectvmry uhiltt mMnfthm; .or doe. their action Interfere with buainea, pnranlti Bach boicontaina ell doeen pill,. FBIC1 OKI DOLLAB, ndwfll beaantbymall poet-paid by anyalrartlaad Agent, i.roceiptof the money, bow by uruggl.ta gereraiiy. none genuine Wltnont my eitsuatare uu .ue wiwin X. BOANLAN 00., Wholoaale Agonta, Cincinnati. For aale by FX. Wllaon, S. B. Bamuel. tfc Oo., and Bob trte s Bemnela, Oolumbna. auguoeonij r ' r Bank Note Eugravlng. A UXBIOAH BANK NOT! CO., (Bouth-eait uorner maid ana ronrta otreeM,i 01NUINN ATI, OHIO. ngraTed la a atyle oorreapondlng In exoellenoa to that Bank Notoe, Ballroad and Connty Bond., Bill, of Ei- ahMie, Chaoka, Srafta, OertHcatee of Block and Da-eoalt, 8eol.,CarA), Ao Ac The above office u under ne tnipam.ion 01 Q.T.JOBM, aatlS-dly , ... ... fllnoinnatl. GEORGE W. GEORGE, Wholeaale Commlailon Dealer ' " ' '' IB BOOTS ; AND .SHOBS- Goods at Eastern ManuPrs Prices Warehonae, . Ha. 10, Wnlnmt , Steeet 'a - :i t (-7 1 . , ..CINCINNATI,.. marldlliTi WSC, EC. TjTJSXil, MABDrAOTDBIB OF -'"'' . Awnings, Tents and " Hops: Ho. Central Avenue, OlXA.olUXXCe.tl, OXxlOe A WSINOS AND TBNTS Fl'RPIfSllKD JX at lee. than Eaitern prlcea. ALL WOBB. WAB BANTED. Order pnnetnally attended to. wterH.tn. ' - f - - ' ' A. BROAD aTllEET RE8IPKNCJB. ' mH AT, OBIlttABLH UDVtBAIID LOT X .Una ted ou the uortheeat corner of Breed and Seventh etrerte la foraale uneaay etaoefpwyiaeal.-fhe lot I, TO feet oa Hro mI at net by l!uo on Seventh, and la piobably the meet daelrable retieene. property for aale In tie ouy.j j appiy to ' B. B. BEHSOrf, aprt Johneou Bolldlny.- -.' " HHKRT eTRAAH, :"V Btweery aael Provliloa Store. Bo. W Baal Towa atreet, aaaaaS .. .. - n fcdd'iM 1 . iNM.ittllcaf fatinfr-l-s.! ' i 'i . '"" ' "" ' " ; "T...".r ' r -'TnTi tilC'.n " I " " ' , "" HarvVwU'e.. ; KITHOFF, JONES ICO.;- WHOLES AL , AND RITAU, .DEALERS W 7w 1 iroaBioa Aao'DoaaaTto "' 1V:: HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, Irwm, ateel, Tim Ftataa, Cwnaer, ' MBOKAIOB' TOOL Z Agrleiiltorsl ' Inplenents, . BVILVM&B BAMDWAtM, BELTINQ, ' relattv Otts, .VMaUt , M.TK See ASoutlx Blib Jatreet, OLTJMBTJSi O.'-y:'- 4 Bfusic. Etc; OmOSSRINO PIANOS All Rtjles: and frees ' And aart naas and fold ttrer ' 98.000 INSTRUMENTS. .. Theee Inatrumaate have all the , Reiki ImproTementeT or the Are. And are, beyoaul oomperleon, th. .. Finest Piuos in tke World, Particular ettenlloo to reqoeated to BBVEBAI. -1 aa W a. A W tanhv. , I. 0. WOOSB. Sole Agml for Omtrtl OUt, Baokeye Blook, Broad Street, Columbia Saa-SA-I eo-eiy , . . Eprlnr Trade, 1863. l. I am now receiving a new and choice itock of ' FANCY DRY COO DO ;; ". t HOOP SKIRTS y ;:i : i i H NOTIONS, 4t. In all of whloh Noerlor Indnoemente will be offered oaeb buyers. t . ..I m ' 1 ADAM EPPLY, 1 ' ' i : ' ; Mo. to Pearletreet, ' lartB-eodSm Bet. Main S.Waiaut. ClnolnnalL Fnra. a t:C fUST BIOIIVID, AT . (..I 1 -. No. 99 South HigiV Street : . ... : .,. ;t .- : , J tf , A Large and BpWndid Aaaortnieot Zj JSk. D X H m 1 Oouutting of MINE, ' MOUNTAIN MARTIN, ' " ' ; FITCH, AND ' FRENCH SABLE . ' : a VIOTORINEB, MTJFFS AISTD OUPPS. AX80, REAVER AND OTTER GAUNTLETS. rULl. BBTTd AT FltOBf TO tlOO. Ttaoee goode are of extra quality and are warranted. ' Ludltta ere InvltAd to cell end etcumino theee AOod.. aa- anted that they will be well repaid for their trouble. , .. 4. a. Dei i u, nov22-eng2adflm : . . Bo. 99 South High St. Drug, Ac. s. It, No. 85 South High Street, (AKRItlOANBOTSL BU1LDIK9,) Wholes am aid Rataii Dialbb i DRUQ8, MEDICINES CHEMICALS, .... Fatbts, Oils, Dtb Srotts, 1 PERFUMERY AND FANOY ARTICLES, PoBI LlQDOEl I0B MeOIOIVAI PuBPOSEI. Thankful for put fever,, I rerpectfnlly aollclt a abate of our formor patronage, , Good, dellrered to any part or the city rae of chaxga. 1 deotu-dly 1 . , . . Bdoobso 10 Roberts & Samuel. No, 24 North High Street, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL " DEALER IN ' Medktibbb, Chemicals,' OrB-Srom, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES : WUTDOW OlASI ABB QtASSWABB, ... . PERFUMERY. Ae, . 1' , O'PhvneimJ PrtxripHor carihtUy pounded at aU ;flurd.i ,1 .-,: tj :,i 1 .15 ueoHl ' - : 3D H. eT. H. O V L 52 1-2 East Fifth Street, v , .rf-r . ! ' CINCINNATI, ;. , . ,1: OKea hi. rutin Hate aad Meat ta the care ofdln.ea of aha .. , ?' wri.k . n.H end asnerleaoe of many teare la Ca non, net can a.B Wltn eeeureiuwe v r - - e - -..,.!,.. jMre,,nne in the .ncceeetul treatment or aieeaeee or tnat op' 1 " like time to the rare of PRIVATE DISUSES, he pro re. laea curve la the neat obetlnaM1 OMea. Woae ivcently oontraotrd are eurci In a very abort time. Syphilis In Its primary ateeroa cured la aa Incredibly abort ttme. Skin aieeaaas et-.rea raavtafleoiu. . weeke. Alao, atter.da to the practice ol: the proteaal n - p.Mnna at dleteuco. afllted, wilt have ad. vloe end medldne .bat by tending description1 of die, nee and their eondltlon. All ex,m.unlcatloM11 and iret out elrlctlj confldenllal. Br. R. baa a TBDSS, which, from Its mecnanicai enjovctnena, wi e1 altlmately vler to the para, aalrd, ao aa to enable par-anna to follow their ordl nary evocation, without hindrance or lnooovenlence,. Unanll or addren , 1 'marS-dawly a Mo. i!Baat Fifth at. Oineinnatl.- TjTgT hood I 'how lost 1 now natsToRKDi ; oil Pulluhei, in e Seated BnvcUp. " Prfa B.Cfs ;: " a LBOTTJBl OH TBI - " ' NATURE, TREATMENT 4 RADICAL. CURE -Of apermatotTflOM or Bemlnal Weakness, Involuntary Xmlealone, Bexaai veonitr en. . u .- t.net-ally, Mervouaneea, Conaumpllou, P'lepsv and File; Vhvalcel inoanncltv. teaultltta rrtttimelf abnea, Ao. By Bobart J. Oalvarwail, At. a). Author of the aaggeaa Book,'.' ask s 1 ..t.o.v ddi -,,.-,A sMSt da Tsuiataaetda as imBaTara," erit under seal, In a plain envelope, Ve any address, feel MM, ea receipt 01 sut eeaie, or tea swage Kempe, ., ; . i DB OH. d 0. XLlrJl, 1JT Bowery, New York, Foot OBeo Box, 4MS. , apruMAwSais - , -' TBLEartAPnio news Moralnff and Afternoon leport L A T E AM D IMPORTAN THE W. Sf. MEBCER'8 TI8IT TO RICH LATEST FROM FORTRESS Of ON- .,- . .ROEl 'v.-. About the Rumored Surrender of .. IVew Orleans)! GREAT EXCITEMENT .o . ... ; .-,. FOLK. .. 1ST NOR- .. i. Ttaey are Looking for a Tlslt from hu.: r, ., vBaraaiaet . . . . u V - - ' - LATEST SOVTIIEUIV NEWSl i FIOIIT NEAR IIARRISOKBl'RG! FROM THE MOUNTAIN DEPAT- MENTt , GEN. FREMONT AND THE G17ER. RILLASt - eVC, AC., Ac, Ac. About M. Mercler'H tlslt to Rlcli- mond, Nsv YoiK, April 28. The Washington Star says it la not only true that M. Mareer, the Frenoh Minister, did not see and converse with Dr. Lemoire, is Richmond, on the oooasioa of ., b, aii.th. his reoent trip into Richmond papers; out enoonragement for peiMvsranoe in their current insurreoiion, through Dr. L., as they also allege. But it is alao oertalnlj true that while there, he held no official eommunioation whatever with nor person exoeDt the Conguls of hid own (JoTernment and Norfolk. While 4hr, we learn he saw and conversed with many persons whom he had known in sooiely here, iuoluding Judiah P. Jienjaniiu, but his intercourse with them, one and all was wholly of an unofficial character. . -.. From Fortress Monroe. - Fobtbssb Moitaor, April 28. A boat con taining four black men and one white man ar rived here tbie morning from Portsmouth. They report that the Merrimae will come out soon. A dispatch in yesterday's Richmond papers, received by a flag of truce, dated Mobile Friday, says ths Union ganboats passed forts Jaok-aon and 8b Phillip at 4 o'clock Thursday morn-' log, aod-al o'clock the seme day were before New Orleans , ' A rumor was current in Norfolk, last ninht. that New - Orleans had surrendered.' But few troope were at Norfolk or in the. vicinity of it. It waa rumored that Com. Tsrnall bad been removed from the command of the'Merrimao. Special to the If. T. Times.1 " j It Is slated by contrabands that ths most in- tenss sioitemsnt exists around Norfolk, and they have great fear of hu atlask by Burnside. Nearly all the troops have gone to South Mills to repol any advanoe that might be made. UontraDanus stats that the new prow on the Mcrrlmao is twelve feet long, of wrought iron ana stesi, potntea. . ; -;, : Many oittgens of Norfolk are leavins. The fall of New Orleans is eencedei by every one, u 1 ia, ' 1 1 .. -w v. Southern News, ' - New Yobk, April 28. A letter from Edisto Island, 8. C. 18th, reports a brilliant uff.iir on St. John's Island, resulting in Ihe total route of 200 rebel cavalry, by about VO of onr men. Ihe puny oonsisicd of Capt. Khiud, Dr. BriU nail, Masters Mate, Nelson, 80 'men and a how-luer ftoia the United gunbo.it Crusader, and 80 men from the 47th New York, 65th Penneylva-nia and Si New Bampshlro Regiments, under Capt. Dow, of the latter regiment. ihe rebels lost eoout ou Auiea ana wouuaea. No one on our side was killed. , ! . SitlrmisIUnff near Harrlsonbury. HAaaisosBoao, April 27. Yesterday after noon the pickets of Col. Donnelly's brigade, eta-tinned ain-ht miles henoe. on the UordoDuvllle Road, were attacked by a large force of Ashby's rear guard au driven baoK. uoe man was killed and three others wounded. The reserve of the 46th Pennsylvania and a eeoUon of Hampton's battery then advanced and repulsed the rebels. Tbey retreated 10 the woods, where several of our shells were ucca lo buret ia their very midst, and a wagon was seen gatberlfg up and carrying off their dead and wounded. Uwing to tne Daa state 01 .me roaus, vunneuy has been oiderSd to take . up a new position nearer the town until ths roads get better. From the Mountain Department. . ,-, (Special to tha N. T. Timoa.) Wheelibo. April 27. The combined move ments ordered by Gen. Fremont against the guerillas In Webster county, have proved eminently euooessful. Lieut. Lawson, with one detachment employed In this service, has returned, and others are returning. In a aevere running ngni 01 seven miles, Lawson killed 17 gueiillas and took 10 prisoners. ' ' The town of Addison, a small plscs, the only one in the new oounty, being deserted, was burned; It had been a guerilla haunt. A formidable organiiation in Braxton, Webster and adjoining oounties, is entirely destroyed, the leaders proposing to surrender. It is understood the guerillas taken will bs promptly shot. Oen. Milroy's soouts oa tbe 23d last, attacked tlie reur guarti of the enemy, ten miles oast of the Shenandoah mountain, the boundary of this department. They killed one Lieutenant and two privates, and captured a Lieutenant and one private. None of our men were hurt. The rebel oonscripts are deserting in large numbers; swearing Unionism and .returning horns. - , Reports from Staunton say the enemy s sloX and wounded, and large train, of soldiers are neaetni, nnjitward bv rail. Bnow fell 18 inohes deep at Monterey, on the 24tb Inst 1 Pbilapelpbia, April 27. Mr. Crump for mors than a quartsr of a oentury oonnected with the prese of this city, principally at tached to the Inquirer, died this forenoon at bis residence in Camden, ...-.,. St. Joint's, NiwrotmnnASB, April 28. Ths steamship North American from Liverpool April 17in, via Londonderry April 18th, passed Cape Race Sunday, and was boarded by the news yacht of the Associated Free', and a sum. mary of the news obtained. The Great Eastern bad been get off the gridiron at Milford in safety. Provisions quiet and steady; Consols closed oa Friday at D3,9i for .money., , . f f . 1 at 1 t . KsWABEE, 111., April 28. A fire here yesterday destroy sd six stores. Loss $12,000; insursd $6,000. . , . . r . - ;.; - New Yobs, April 28. The steam gunboat Connecticut arrived from tbe South .West Pass on ths 12tb. . - t . Ths Connecticut brought sick aad wounded seimen from the squadron. When she left the Mississippi, all the ehlpe of the expedition to New Orleans were insids the Passes, and had their dcoke sanded, ana were already for ao. lion. . ...... . .; ' Adams' Army Eiprcia Company carried over $430,000 North, yerterdsy, In various sums, be ing the contributions 01 soiaiers to tnsir families. This enormoue sum was oontalned In over 6,800 paroels. Such Is Ibe responslbilty, promp-tituts and dispatch of this immense company, that every dollar of the above sum will teach its consignee within ten or fourteen days at ths farthest. This is doing business oa a msgntn-oent soale, and is only one of many suoh operations that they undertake. What tbey do, is well done. fwitrn iVooresilJt. ' - Rebii Spies. A correspondent of. ths Bath Times, who is with ths army In float of York-town, says lhat about ten days ago Lieut. Swan, ef Ihe 7th Malae, end William brown of Brunswick, bugler in the . same regiment, lost their way and wero taken by the rebels, who look their slothes and passsd all through- our lines, gaining valuable Information.' Negroes have been seea among the rebels, Hi lag upoa us. - , 1862. - . Abont the Battle-Plcty Forget-- ten-Tbe Bold Shout, the Bully a Silent- ' ;"." - - ' t A correspondent 9 the Loulsrllle Journal, speaking of tbtj Bhllob bsttls, says:) ' .. ',' ' " I see la th Cineinnstl .times statement !htt Basil's army crossed Ihe river aad march ed up the Dana- t siuace. , 00 me contrary marohed ap from the boat wilh colors flying, and the bands playing, and during Us hottest of tbs Bght onr Esoelsior band was playing list sat sf the Wilderness." . It is true that ihesa are little things, : but Ultls things show ths spirit aad determination of any army. It is almost impossible for man who has stood one or two Tolleys to show the "whit f,iher," as there is as much danger in retreating as la advancing, and it Is wsll kaowo that in hun dreds of instances, espsoially when opposed to artillery, ins roar or a column haa suttered any percent, more than the aduaec; nor is this strange, vksn wa sonsider that most artillerists fire too hijb, and their . aim is always to eat down to sdranoe. But it is the battle-field wblok tries men's soule j it is ths dread tottery of life and deaib. True, man has about one ehanee out of a hundred of being uninjured, bat the uncertainty of that ehanae, aad - tke certainty that death ia swelling somc,ibegets a strangs feeling in tbs fcsart, too) as for Christianity, after the 4 ret easting ef the eye to Heaven ia secret prayer, is 1 s forgotten. Mar. seem unlike themselves in looks and in actions; tke most quiet become Ihe most loud and boisterous, while your bully, your fisticuff rowdy, beootaea pale and quiet, and ahows that bs would gladly run if fas dared) euoh and so various are the nature, of men in tattle. Aa' Unpublished Incident of the Great ' .. ... Dattle. ; Among Ihe wounded brought from Pittsburg, and placed in the Fourth stieet hospital, was an offioer in the 2d Iowa regiment. lie relates with more vividness than our pan can command, an encounter in tke great battle whioh has not yet been published. 1 . , . Ths offioer wes wounded on Sunday. On en- 4erri.n5 v "i ww: Tii u m made himself as com fortable as possible, and lay there patiently awaiting tha arrival of friends lo oarry him away. - Monday morning, he was surprised to find that hs lay between the contending armies. On one aids of ths ravine, a Union battery was planted, and on Ihe ether, a rebel one, each supported by denee masses of Infantry, Both batteries opened fire, and for hours, the shot and shell Sew thick and heavy over him. He lay so near the rebel battery, that he could not only see their movements, but hear their commands Ths shots of the Union battery were very effective, and a Oeneral offioer, whom he supposed to be Beauregard, declared It must be taken at all haiards. . - .... He seleoted foe that purpose a brigade oom-. posed of Louisiana and Texas regiments. These troops were all uniformed, soma of them very handsomely, and the regiments have very gorgeous banners. Hs judged them at onoa to bs orack regiments, ao heard Beauregard address them, telling them that a great deal depended on their taking that battery, that tbey could and must do il, and that If they returned without occupying it, they ebould be disgraced. The eiders were received by the entire brigade, and they moved off with the sieady tramp of vstsrans. There was a moment's lull in the fire of the national battery, but It was only to ("substitute oanieter for ehelL The next moment the guns belohed forth an inoessant fire, and the oanister raked the advanoing columns. Whole platoons were shot down, but still the biigads advanced., Ths murderous firs increased. Dead and wounded lay piled up iu great heaps. The column staggered. , An effort was made to Close up the gaps that the oanister constantly made in the column. . The shattered column had readied a point near where our wounded heroes lay, when, unable to stand tbe deadly Are, the remnant broke and ran, leaving the whole side of the ravine .covered with their dead and wounded. . ', . The National oommtudersaw the advantage of the movement, and immediately ordered hu adrunoe of his infantry.: In a moment the column leaped from behind the battery, and dashed down the bank of the river with a yell. Then up hill they moved on the double quick, and wilh bayonets fixed, jumped over the killed and dying. Bofore a mluute had elapsed, they were upon tbe rebel battery, which they captur ed entire. Our line was immediately advanced to opposite the eide of the ravine, and soon after our informant was oarried from the Bangui-nsry field. . , .. .. "It was a grandly terrific encotacle." said he. in oonolusion, "and I do not regret my wound, as it enabled mo to be a silent .witness of the enoouoter." Cin. Timti. . . r . ... , , -. FROM GEN.. MITCHEL'S OITIS- W- b..a .,,, ,, Advance Into DixieCapture of Huntsvllle and DecaturLtirgc Amount of Property . Taken Important , Dlhpatchcs from Beauregard Intercepted. . Ue- . ' From Corraepondonoe Ciqolnnatl Gassfe. ''L' FatettaVili.e, TennV April 10, 1862. ' A little further' into Dixiel. Oa Tuesday, at 3 o'clock, p. m the . 8th Brigade, Col. Torohln commanding, took up' Ihe line of march for Fayettevtlle, the county seat of Lincoln county. Yesterday morning the remainder of the division followed, the lftb Brigade (Col. Ly tie) bringing up the rear: Some of Ihe enemy's scouts who were here yesterday evening fled at the approach of onr forces. : I toll you, a few days ago, that the rebel Lieutenant, O'Brien, who ' aooompanied the Brownlow party to Nashville, and had ever sines been loitering within our lines, was ordered to leave rjneioyviue at onoe, by uen. Alitche). ' lie somehow obtained leave to remain until yester day, when Col. Young, belonging to the Seces sion army, wno nan neen sick sinos going to Nashville, but was now ovnvale9eont, was ordered airuy. Oen. Mitchel sent them off in a carriage, with an escort and a fl.ig of truos, to cenduot them as far as they wished to be con ducted. Idem. H, Jonnson, of Kennett's Cav alry, was In command of ths escort When tbe party arrived at Fayettevtlle, Col, Young coolly diemlssed the escort, telling them that he did not wish tbelr services any further. But the most disgraceful portion of this Bterv remains to bs told, When ths esoort arrived at Fayetteville, it waa surrounded by a mob of the citizens of that place, who heaped upon our unoffending soldiers every imaginable Insult that sould be expressed In the African lingo, which these Secessionists universally use. Ths most opprobrious epithets wsrs applied, and the most insane threats nnnea at tneir neads, Col. Young and Lieut. O'Brien making no effort to restrain them. At last one or the scoundrels, consider- tne- himself licensed by Ihe forbearance of onr men, euvanoea to iicai. jonnson, look bold of his bsard, juiiea it, sna, wltn the grinning malice of a devil, exolalmed, "You're a speoi-mev of the d d Yankees they're sendinc down herr, are you?". ' It Is a matter of surprise that Lieut Johoson did not cat him down in hie traoks. . But he remembered that his mission was ons of peace, and determined to go to ihe very verge of human forbearance rather Iban cimmit any violence: ' After this outrage the bootlngs and revilings or the fayeltevllliana were redoubled, and the party were glad to take rcf Jge In an old hotel, where they remained during the night The next morning thej started baok toward Shelliyvtlle, and met the advanoing columns of cur forces, . Oen. Milchel was hlghty indignant when be heard of the outrage that had been committed upon his ling of truoe. fie rode rapidly into the town, and found a large number of the citizens assembled in the public square to witness the entrance of our army. 'People of Fajettevllltl" cried Ihe General, in a voico of thnnder, "you are worse than sav-agetl Even they respect a flag of truce, whioh you have not done. Yesterday, the soldiers whom I sent to your town on a mission of courtesy aed i mercy, were shamefully insulted In your streets, and It was you who gavs ths Insult. You ara not worthy to look in the faoe of honest men. . Depart to your homes every one of you, and remain there until I give you permission to coins forth!"' ' . ' i At ths oonolusion of this speeoh tbe skulking cowards scattered to their houses like frightened rata to their holes, snd to-day, the atmos phere of Fayetteville is unpolluted by the breath of traitors. .''.. Col. Harris, of ths 2d Ohio, has been appointed Provost Marshal of Faystlevtlle,' and haa established his office in tbe Court Houss. Ths town contains between 800 and 1.000 inhabitants. ', ' ' ' ' "..... ',. Before dosing this letter,! wish to mention an Instsncs ef personal daring of which I have just heard. Corporal Pike of Company A, 4th unto uavairy, is a nstea soout, wnoss exploits, U thee were wctis", would probabl surpass , 1.' i'liYiwjT iu iiW.Valel) .a v.'j I 1 ,!. !,..! NUMBER 257. those of the bandit Morgan. Before our troon. reached F.y.tteville, h.'bad bee, tok? 55? rations throughout all the region ef owaatrv eorroundiog that tewr-He werTettrrning to. ward ebelby villa, oa iueedey mernlag, whas as met three wacons loaded with drivers informed him that the meat belonged to ths Confederate army. This was enough for t... uruenng utc taree teams to be driven abreast of each other, he took a number of rails, pleoed them under the wagons, set """" waiteij until rails, wagons. Rebel seeats wets the rlplnlty while Ihe opttrauva was going CB, A DSHLS. Ala.. Anrll lxtJa. IMS To-day I really feel lib. .,,.1,1.. ir. k... ainliieaasaa.1 aa, (.- . , . P IT.7i "T? wmen, auoougb bloodless, must be attended by sush Important results as a . V, ""siimatett.i m, miB lta and for all practical military purposes, the cnlu tins of communication between the Eae'tan weetera armies of the enemy is in our hands To General Mitchsll aad hie brav, & long the distinguished toner of being the first tfl1 Penetrate to the great Charleston and Mem-phis Railroad, and ths first to break through the rebel,' boasted line of defense, exteadiag from Chattanooga to Corinth. . The advance from Fayetteville ieHuatsTtUe was SkvSs with tbe fall expectation th,, at ,h, latter place there would be a terrible straggle Every one knew ths importance of the Charleston and Memphis ttsilroad to tha enema- ... cry one supposed that they would guard it with the utmost vigilsnos, and everyone predicted that the division of our army whloh ehould first reach it would be met with the sternest determination, and would obtain possession of this great ohannal of eommunioation onlw h. . costly expenditure cf blood. We all perfectly understand, too, that ths rebels had accumulated upon this read nearly all ths rolling stock of all ths railroads from Bowling Green south ward, uejisiuw wnat legitimately belonged to the road itself; and that they-coqld, therefore, with the utmost fuollity, concentrate at anw threat ened point whatever foroee thev had e.t mand. Ws did not know but Ihs rebel army of .ue Vbuujlg, ooaoluaiOeT SO aDenrtOK Virinle. and esoapieg from Ihs apparsntly "nerveless grasp" of MoClellan, would bs pouring in over- wueiiauug lumw aowu tne jsast Tennessee and Virginia Railroads, at ths very time when we should be advancing upon Huntsvllle. We oould not tell but that our main army in the neighborhood of Corinth would suffer some se rious reverse, in wnioh case ws were Inevitably But, la case ws should bs successful In ease we should break the enemy's famous line we knew how important would be theoonsequences. inere was no time for hesitation, and Gen. Mitohol is not ths man to hesitate, even if there were..- 1 . - ' The order to maroh from Fayetteville was received wilh pleasure a plsasure which was slightly alloyed with regret that we bad not uBMroyea tne town.- , ' - t- - , Col. Tarehin's brigade and Simonson'e battery started from Fayetteville, at 6 o'olook a. at, en Thursdsy, and march sd diligently nntil 9 0 slock p. m., whioh brought them to within eleven miles of Huntsvills. CoL Sill's brigade, with Loomte's famous bettsry, followed clossly, the ether brigades at a greater distance. A stsasg Union feeling waa manifested after we entered Ihs Stale of Alabama, hue. 1, . mingled with many false notions ooaeernieg State sovereignty, and the duty of submission thereto. One old gentleman, a nlantan. with an extensive estate, expressed the views ef the majority of ths people of Madison county. "It seemed like tearing out my heart," said hs, "to give up the old Union, but when Alabama voted 10 separate, I thought it my duty to sustain her." "But," I reminded him, "Alabama, ia attempting to break np the nation, did what ehe had ao right to do." "Ah," said the old gentleman, "passion and prejudice blinded our eyee to that truth." "Are you then willing, ' I ssked, "to see the authority r ih v.iu.ki Government, restored?" "Yes." ha : rmlieid. "and to pray from this time forth that aliher people may bs willing to return to their alleei- auce. .., x 1 1 , . 7 ,. The necrors lhat wo saw . vtA friendly, and generous and benevolent, evea mmr in actors were meet strongly Becesh Shortly after entarlne, tha Bum ....,l i!"" plantation of the Secession General, N. 1 . Walker. eXtcadlnir elene Ihe. mnmA -II.. Ibe mansion waa utterly deserted, and Ml the furniture removed. A perfect host of negroes oame down to see and to - weloome us. They laughed, they eang, they danced, In their glee. ! 1 stopped a moment to converse wilh them. "By golly," said a fine looking, honest young negro, "i's a great notion to go along with this crowd 1 wnat do yon say, messal" "My poor friend," (replied, "if you do, you - will probably be turned out of our lines the first nlaoe we en camp; somsbody who olalms yon will corns and lake yon Daok ; ana then, beside being severely punished for running away, you will ia every respeot bs worse off than before." The negro understood me. "It Is very hard, maaaa," said he. His voice faltered; I eaw lhat tears were gathering In bis eyes, and I rode away, as my own were growing moist ana aim. A detached house upon Oen. Walker's plantation was In flames . when I passsd. It had been set on fire by soms of our soldiers, but whether accidentally or not I did not stop to inquire One of the negroes had a heavy iron ring and bolt fastened to his leg. He said he bad worn them for more than three months. A cavalryman descended quietly from his horse, knocked off the fetters, fastened them to hie saddle, and rods away. "By Heaven," I heard him mutter, "I would forfeit a year's pay for tho privilege of transferring these to the legs of therasoslwho pnt them on lhat man!" Ths 8th brigade, CoL Turohln, with Blmon-son's battery, did not spend mush time in slumber Thursday night After four hours' rest they reoommenced their march, and reached Huntsvills at 6 o'olock on Friday morning. : An advenes fores of 150 cavalry, together with a seotlon of ths battery, in oharge of Capt. Simonson himself, assisted by Lieut M. Allen, commanding the seotlon, ths whole directed by Col. Kenaett, first caught sight of Huntsvllle and the lovely cedar surrounding it They wers advancing upon the douHc-quick, when two locomotives, with trains attashed, suddenly made their appearance upon Ihe railroad. They were moving In the dlreotion of Stepheneon. A shot from ons of Simonaon's guns brought the first ons to. The Captain then turned, to pay his respects to ths ths second. A shot or two induced it also to haul np. In ths meantime, the encineer of the first train waa quietly sottlne? on a full head of steam, and when nobody was suspsoting suoh a thing, he suddenly started off. The cavalry went in pursuit, and actually ohassd the looomctlve for a distanoe of ten miles. A few horsemen tried their carbines upon the second train, and an unfortunate colored person received one of ths bullets In his neck. It was said, too, by Ihs Seoesh, that a rebel from Corinth, going home slightly wounded, was instantly killed. I am aot certain whether this is trus or not. 1 presume, however, that i tie. j The infantry had come up while this was going on, and Col. Mlhalotxi, or the 24ih Illinois, sent a detachment to tear up a portion of the track in Ihe direction of Decatur. The escape of any mors trains was thus effectually prevent. ea. " ' : Three oavalrymen rushed into the- town, found a large number of rebel soldiers sleeping in and around a number of cars, and actually made prisoners of 170 men, including a Major, six Captains, and three Lieutenants. : The most of these fellows belonged to the 9th Louisiana Regiment, and were on their way to join It in V-rglnia. The Major's name waa Uavauaugh. His regiment did not all re-enliat when their term of servioe (one year) expired, and he had been home for reoraits. Hs had suooeeded in obtaining 140, and was taking them to ths Old Dominion to fill up the ranks of his regiment. When he found lhat both himself and hie recruits wsrs prisoners in tho hands of ths Yan kees, his mortitioailou was visibly expressed all over his countsnanos. ' J. When our troops advanced into tbe town, they found they had made a prise of seventeen locomotives (sixteen of tbsm in fine vanning order), and about 160 cars, passenger and freight. I shall not attempt to enumerate the other articles oaptured, and your readers may estimate ths valus of the rolllng-stook. - - ... The prisoners oaptured are a wretched look ing eetof men, and evidently belonging to the loweet elasa of Southern society which ia, I admit, patting them down pretty low. They are nearly all sick of the buslaess in which they are engaged. Many of them say they were forced to enlist; others admit that they .wore Influenced by leaders whom thsy believe to be bad men; and there is scarcely one who does not regret that he was indussd to take op erase against the Government. One of them told me that if he were home once more he would die in his traoka before he would again 1 consent to tight against the old Union- "I foolishly thought' said hs, -"that I was fighting for my country when obeyed Ihe mandates ef sir. j -o ..ti h c;." tVj.ii t t-jii bivui Coloael Turehla has occupied Decatur. "A WrT-hi0;"0" b!'", oSimonsoa'abat-hir.7-A'uW"t bd "se from here 'eti. Blgna. haa been re. taken e.u.ii.i.. - Z'J.?" mria "he eeuntry in every dlreeUoB. General Mitehel'e diviad. I. VIZ mSJl -VtT f?1,,,r1th,ln 1 " wr,' ' I Blast ef it all. atlaeimie 1. . . . , . x win ia le BetlaalBc to flow ia ui n.i ?t, ' t-reme of tha MhaliiAB le .Ku,i a 1 . r . . w. a.wiagto 0100. . ,, i. ... . " -Dioatop.au, April 14. ; I ea tM Dewetar, heoeuBtv aeataf li..m.. oounty, and having (Tnlghed mybusinees there, l am Wailine? farm, train of eaea ,n . -k ... l. DeOeMOtf ia, a. favflavl tnmn ds.i.!.:.. .w a -: eight hundred inhabitants, the most of whom ere deeply Infected with tha madness af aeoee-sIob; aotwlihstanding, when Alabama Toted to go out of the Union, Limeatone county gave majority of two to eae la favor of loyalty and peacs. Tha towns in this part of the country an teem to have been little centers of disaffection, la which the doctrinae of itaufi, a re, ob tained a foothold, and whence they were gradually diffused throughout ths surrounding country. In each of ths towns, especially ia the county towns, wss a knot of third or forth, rats demeeoernaa. arhn enakla n .K..1. -.-i tioa in a time ef quistnsssand neaee. honed that the whirl and surge of revolution might elevate them above the heads of their fellow -tuia. Their calculations wore not altogether inoorreot. The masses of ths Southern people are very liable to be deceived by a tonguey politician; and ' thess frothy, gassy soamps have, as a result ef "' .uv .euviuuu, mowuy oDiAineo tne piaoee ana the notoriety which thev novated. But thev era . . really the moat cowardly portion of Ihe South ern people; aad, as the columns of the Union army advance, they universally fly before the storm they have themselvee conjured np, and leave the poor, duped, deluded massss, to suffer the ooasequenoes of their leaders' crimlnslitv ' and thslr own folly. Thus It has been in every town wa have as yst visited in Alabama or Tennessee. Tbe peo ple see how they have been betrayed; tbey neartuy curse their betrayers; aad yet, so dsep- ly are they under the influence of tha falaa. nooas ana eopniems 01 ineir leaders, that many of them eurss ths lattsr and ths National Gov-ernment in the same breath. Decatur was first occupied by the 24th and two companies of Ihs 19th Illinois Regiments, ' wuiuii, wttn a ponton or oimonson s Dattery, left Huntsvllle ' on a train of cars Saturday morning last, reoovered a picoe of oanncn whioh naa been lost the nlgbt before, and proceeded onward to Ihe Tennessee River. One object of the expedition was lo burn Ihe bridge over the Ten- ' " ntsaee at Deoatur, ia order to prevent our being assailed by a foros from ths neighborhood of Corinth. But the fight near there on Monday had renderod the rebels as fearful of an approach from ths east as ws wsrs of a move- ' ment from the west, so that when Cole. Turohin and Kennett, who commanded the expedition, arrived at ths bridge, they found that it had been fired by the rebels themselves. . Deciding instinctively that it was always-proper to do just ihe opposite of what theee """ sooundrels wsrs about, our leaders wisely determined, instead of burning the bridge, to put out the flames which the rebels had already . kindled.- This was done in a twinkling; and our gallant fellows, horse and foot, rushed, through the town to asssll a body of mounted rebels who thsy understood were enoamped there. But the bird wee flown. , Col. Bell, with - j a battalion of cavalry, had been there, but the . . first faint and distant rattle of Ihe train had . sent him and all his command flying belter- '' ekelier toward Taaoumbla, leaving tents, pro- ' visions, sabres aad every thing, except their . . precious earoasses, behind them, "Golly, mas- , sa," said an old Ethiopian to me, a few hours, ago, "Golly, massa,- I've seed fast races afore, hut ai-tie nvlhinn, In tnn.l flatt" ... ----- -j..-D --,-- - Bince we have learned that the rebels ia the . violnity of Corinth will have no troops 10 spare . for Ihe purpose of assailing at, we are all heartily glad that the bridge at Deoatur was saved. ' It is a magnificent structure, and has, . ever sines he erection, been an object of pride lo the r people of , North Alabama. . As matters now ., stand, its talus to us will bs incalculable. The negroes - were gathered- in masses all along the road. As the ears passed ihey bow- ed, they scraped, they grinned, they puilea off , - tneir nats, ana in every way tried to aeoure a , recognition from those whom they considered : their friends. Occasionally a generous hearted ' soldier would:, wave his hand or flourish his-sword Id them, aod then their ohild-like manifestations of delight literally knew no bounds., Whenever the train stopped the colored peo- -, pie would ollmb on board, and beg 10 be taken along. One eed, earnest' faoe peeped into tbe '"' door of tho ear In which I was sitting, and its ownsr put up the usual petition. "Get dawn," said ah officer on board; "get down and go to , your master; we cannot take you." The slave shuddered at lbs word ''master." ' "O, fords " good God's sake," said he, "let me so wid you and wait on you all I" There was a pereepil- , ble tremor in tbe officer s voice as he repeated his command lo Ihe negro, and I saw that a tear waa stealing down the' cheek of a rough-dragoon, who sat upon a seat just opposite to me. . On Sunday, Lieut. Bhoemakor. of Comoinv H, 4lh Ohio Cavalry, went Out on a reeonnoiter-ing expedition, with a small eqoed of men, and about fifteen stiles -west of Deoatur, oame upon j sixteen of the enemy's cavalry. Tbe latter Immediately fled toward a swamp, and, dismounting, lsft their horsee and plunged in. thinking. of oourse, that our men would be silly enough to parens thsm on horseback. But Lieut. Shoe- ' maker ordered hie own men to dismount, follow--ed the rebels olosely on foot, hilled one, oaptured-five, and returned with his prisoners and a dcien extra horses to oamp. , Torktown Items. (Cor. M.T. World.) '..'. 1 ' '.' : Camp Scott, Aprill9. The Rebel Force.-It has alrsady been attempted by those whose motives at beBt are eutploious, to create an impression abroad among the people that the force in front of Ihe army of the Potomao is purposely exaggerated by somsbody quiintabel Whatever may be the motive, it would perhaps open tneireyes ir tne. long line or cerensea now . stretching from ths York to the Jamen rivers were staring them in the face, as they do dally and nightly ths bravs army now encamped bo- - tore mem. . It ta now ascertained beyond doubt that the rebel forces are under the command of Generals Johnson, Lse and Magruder, whoss combined strsngth must bs bstween one hundred and - twenty and one hundred and fifty thousand men. , (150,000.) The disposition of this foroe probably is as follows: General Joseph E.John- ' acn oommanda ths oenter, defending the approach lo Richmond, with sixty thousand men; General J. Bankhead Magruder the right wing, facing to the rear and intrenohed at Yorklown, with fifty thousand; while General Robert Lee, , with a foroe of forty or fifty thousand on ths left wing, protects an attempt to eater Richmond by a flank movement on the extreme left If this bs the disposition of their foroee, the devslopmsnt of Oeneral MoClellan' s plans (always through same mysterious ageney rsveated to them) may necessitate a change In their tao tias. It was therefore the part ef a wise general to make surs first that hs should not be driven off the peninsula before he attempted to perform lhat operation on the enemy. It lo now' done, and although I am not at liberty to aay, what measures have been taken, yet I may pre-, diet that Yorktown muet surrender or be evacuated within a short time. It was neoessary to BTlng up ths siege trains to demolish the formidable works of the enemy. They have arrivw ad; how many and where they are I am not allowed to state. The lathabltaata v - - " 7 Far Ihe most part have no Idea of the struggle in which we are engaged. They are Simple.uuaf : feoied, and unedncated, and eanoot conceive ai y other then that contained in thejexpression oon-stantly reiterated, "we never harmed the North, why do they wish to dtroy our property." The Stale Government whioh alone hae ever had any direct eommunioation with them lor the gen-t ralgovernment heretofore has only dealt In its operations with States, and not the people is in their eyes Supreme ; or at least they do aot oonoelve of any greater power, therefore In all their conversations they refer not to national, or Union tronns. but Northern end Southern army defines their ideas of ihs merits of Ihe on lest. As for treason, iney nave no more laea that they are guilty of it, or of what it is, than an unborn child. Ihe State auihorltiee pass laws and they obey. This does not apply, without exoeption, to all, but to the majority of the people who have remained here. ' Many have left their homes to join their fortunes with those of thslr friends, and Indeed none but old men and women remain. t nVf A private Utter, whioh oame by the Philadelphia from Key Weet to Captain Porter's son, whs is a lieutenant in the Ninety-first Regiment, states that seven of the bomb schooners aad three steamers had passed Fort Jaokaea in one Bight ' The asms Utter states, that one whole plantation of nig roes, numbering one hundred end fifty, cams down in boats, batteaus, Ac , to tbs fleet. They say that thslr master had abandoned their place and gone to - New Orleans. They are eery glad le get away, but protest stroagly against the fleet attempting to go farther ap the river, declaring lhatlhav will all be blowa to plsoee. - ' e ' . . . a . ... . -l 1. 1 ,., ( ;r n 1. L-i.'-t itets'l .-.I r i liiv t l , -i

PJitladelphla IdTortUlaa;. T; Mil. BAKER & CO., , BUNK, BAIOUBt ' ' iMfuriu in iimim o ioo: 1 1 j . FANOY DRY GOODS I BILKS, PRESS GOODB, SLOTHS, OASSr. MEBE8 AND VK8TINGB, WHITE 000D8 AMP EMBROIDERIES, LINENS, HO--," BIERY AND; NOIipNS, , ;- No 137 North Third street, -C PHILADELPHIA. " ,7 mare-dam , r,UB OHIOB.' Arab ItrHt'akm Third, Philadelphia VFTOHS. MBWCOMER, Fropritler. eTTbls Botct omtral, convenient by Peeeiiigii rj7u all perl, of the eitr, ul In everv "r"l1r Jj.M to tli. comlurt ul wants of tko dmIm. Dibtic EVANS & NASSAU, MILITARY FURNISHERS, No. 418 Arch Street, pSIIjAIJHiiP: BILK AND BUNTING FLAGS, PRESENTATION FLAGS, REGIMENTAL FLAGS, J ; EMBROIDERIES, SV '; 33stci-tll3tioca. 1881. kill W. WAI80H. j oh aim iwa WM- M'OUJJLY & GO..1 MAHUrACTDIIKi Of DRUGGISTS' GLASSWARE, Black Bottles, DeUhns, AMD Window ..Olassi AT IBB PITTSBURGH, PHOJNIX, SLIQO A EMPIRE . GLASS FACTORIES, . t a PITTSBURGH, PA, Fancy Printing At Engraving. .sinking, Engraving, iiPnnoy Xx-ixatlxxa;, By A. eV G.'McCUBMENT, ... ail Chesnnt St,, Philadelphia, JBNVElOrEa, BUSINESS' CARDS,' LABELS, $c, either Tinted of Embotted: SEAL PRESSES, PATENT SELF INKING PRESSES knd HAND STAMPS neatly , - executed. - KV"Ordvi promptly Atundcd tiia' 1 A i '.s'i fc. :l reer.-iISm ' If Oruga, Etc. . JOHN C. SAVERT, . .... Wholesale Srucciat, ANDDEALEBIH '.PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, DTE STUFFS, TEB-FUMElif, PATENT MEDICINES, e , Ac. No. 80T Market Street, Philadelphia, Fa.-; - Olty and Country Pealera aupplled on the met favora-b!,wm Orden by mall promptly attended to. .. mar4 t3m - - milts n r. i.ouitv. dbbhtniit itaikt, X betw. en Third end Fourth, Pbllad.lphla. The nnderalgo. d, havlu leaned, for a term of yean, thla popnUr honto, hve the plennue of announcing to their friend, and the traveling community that It 1. now onan for the rco-ptlon of giuata. Tfi. hoaee .Inoe the flr.tor alerob butt, hae been entirely wuovated and re lilted In a anpsilnr manner; tha aparlnanta Are large, well ventl'eted and fnrnlahud In modem .lyle. It la ooo-trally located, o mvenlcnt to all the dopot end ateaniboat Luullage, and In tue Immediate vicinity of , the Ctaltom Boom, Poet llftVo and tbeO-trn Exchange. - tionnoeto I icb the Hotel la a B eteuvant for the accent-miction uf tii-tee preferring tbe Europe tu plan. Prtcea of Boom, from Three to ttevea Dollar, per week, accord-log to Ittoellou. . ' " , U-td 1 50 per day. Tnb'e d'Hote tot mercbente and bualneqo men from 1 to 3 P. M. 1 HEHBY NEIL, , 18AA0 L. DSVOI. eprS Steel rent.. R. FSTERBROOK & CO. , Steel Pen Manufacturers, No. 403 Arch Street,) . . jt'biladelpliiav, RsisTHiarmooiE co, dbrirb to . oall th. ntuiotlnn of the trad- and the American Fuftllc t tho hot that dtoal Poua are niala In thla eoun try oy them equal la qtullty to the be.t Imported ar. tlcloa. CITY AND COUNTRY DEALERS ; aoppllad on the moat fayotabla Icrml. . ' , Ordera by mall promptly Attandno lo. ' ' : n ' marld.Sm WM Fancy Ooodi. V ' AB1IAB T0DH4, PAV1D YODNO, H. 0. MOOBI ARMAR YOUNG. BRO. & CO.;'; IUP0BTEB3 DKAtlBSIH V' EMBROIDERIES, LACES, WTITE GOODS. HOSIERY.; ; MITTS, tiLOVKS, TRIMMINGS, &e. No. 835 Market Street, mari dSm ' . PHI1.ADBI.PHIA. LINEN BOSOMS IN EVERY BTYLB ' AND YABIETT, BY J. NICHOLSON, Nos. 101 and 103 Korth Third St.; Ttnnnne a aTrpRnlckH SOLD KB FLAX X tirn Bleached Linen, ami bare all my work made op In the beet ntauuor and.r my own .up.rn.iou, eno arery Al.o, .full line of RmtlTI), COLLARS and COfrS alvaya on hend, carelnlly made and werranbd to Btr-aud fur aula at the lort poaiibla price to Johbera, WholoKale petllaraand ttetellera. Oaeh at.d itru-.pt raying abort lime layer, are partlca. larly Invited. mari-dam awawAwjwwBwAwawMaawAwwAawAwAwaw Hardware. DAVID FAUST & C0., (Boweeeori to Faottj Wlaeirener 1 0o.,j IMPORTERS WHOLESALE DEALERS IN HaRD WARS, TMO. 49 NORTH THIRD ST.. BATTD TMJ4T, TiteH-dHta B. . tiBMAB,- , ISO. BAKOLD i . . , ... ; , . ,t.tX ' , WlanoH'S BOUBJALL OIRBAaiTa (r auhronio Natttre, ueiiainlug to the Mtl, and Fa mala flritii. Uehllltr. Feeble Ao Ion. Prematura Ter mination. Mental Atranlon. Kruplloaa, lurolnnUrf ltaeea, Atrophy, Impotence, BarrMineae, eattre aiieence or peiafnl fntictlotta and even when of twenty yedre et Uteltce. otn 0 ratttotlir ourea in a rew weeee oy m ilbm.tf,. Tkl. veaieil la no, e tneehenkel ettnll ance, neither if It a raetliolna to be laken Inlo tha etum aoh. vaf ila - tveStrt nwUte, Mkum aoeeN-ith, MpoerJeea 1 will a.nd It tor HIM1. Addree. 0. UBKWarhH, Olae , olanatl.t) Vw,P VtolHo. KM. -aprdeWl ilUC tiilaj lf.il it I, vi DAILY MIO STATM HJJIlJjJiNAJL. CJaclnaall AaJTerttBeJtng. A BATTLE HTH-FIREr',7 IUmV BttrBtct In P-urlr-usls I riVK OF HERRING'S SAFE VICTORIOUS I Tnunn Pan', Dastmbtr tl, 1MU ' Oirrwiii: At the rretfire. which ooenrrad hnre oa the llth lieMmbur lAat, myator wtb numlMr of other LulldlDra. waa entirely deatroyed; no lea. than ear en place. f btMlsea. we r. burnt oat and Ara of your aafea aavarely teetad- in ATery t- aiaooe Tiog thnir entire oooirnto. to the eoan. plela ao partMt Miuneuon oi- the njrneraj iwa 01 your aiar rtas'a Miaul llhamploo Hafea whloh wen In niy build. war I am twee mere lorou.n in. u.m end mmr net nMtid hntll tho dar After tha S A. No walar waa thrown oa tha bulUlug. Bwyikisg Id my aafe after the Are e nearly aa g- a, new. u y. WHO..X Aleo praeerred all hie book., paper, and mosey in two of your infra, both being la eaane Bra, Wia. Roberta waa aleo tha fcrluueta owner of another of yonr Patont Ohatnpios Hafea, which wea aerorely tatled, and eared completely bl.booae, papera and money. The recall haa given great aallafeolloa, and we want t o aale but Bar-riog'e bhempioA. rieaee aand ma one aama laa I la, I Muhtofyoulmmadlaieiy. Aand by n. . , h.. ion a. BOWIN. I had two of Herri at', ffaa In ahore Ara.. Jkey aared my booh,, papera and 12,000 1 Bank "'jj'-j Wj yjf) j ninnTNfl'n patkht rnAMPios aated mybooka. naoara And abont MOO lA nmcr aioaep. I would nee no WILLIAM BOUKBTd. HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION i FIRE- 1 , " PROOF EAFE8. .," ' HBBBIBO'lOHArlPIOH BUBGLAB PHOOr SATIS lined with Herring rioyd'e new Patent (Vyilaliied row. WThe only metal wblcn cannot ue ariueo. aim. iiyci.i.i Ki.iwiflHia HAirlfid. for ellrer nu nlnabla papera, Ae. Seme of elrgenl Snleh and en I table ornament, fer the Parlor and Dining-room. - JIBIiBINa AOJ.,861 Uroadwajr. ' TABBKL, BXMBthiO A CO, Pl.lUdtlpUa. BBUUINO 00., Chicago. . nurt-d3oi , haihtowioi Mrs . 0. O. Hillver. Haa been lodno-d by her frlenda to lire publicity to her Tonic, wblch hae fer yeatv been teeted and oaed by them with perfect eoooeei. Bhe theretoro counjentiy onvre it, relying on a trial only, to locomoiend it, nnlvereal dm The following ladle., with buuureua of other., which .pace will not permit to poolleh, can teetify to tha efftoacy of tha Above Vonict . , . , ' CIItOUtNATI BBIIBCKCCg. I 1. ' K Mrs Dp J t White, Hrg Dr Blacimn, John P Foot, . " E A Thompson, "BR Bate., " Df Dodge, 1 ' " ' : Dr JC Spenoor, ' " Ptep Neff, a . . " ' 0 Wiltshire, ' '' " M pomiuiok, 'u i' " D Gibaon, " AlfWood,, T W RTolle," - ' " ; Caggllly, . " f .WM UoOtBuroB' " l Wnotia. "- W A Goodman, J M Niles, J D Minnor, ' M Htnohman, Henry Nlge, J S Brown, E Taylor, t ,' ' Marshall, A M Hall, Whipple, -' irnps rjimpeoB, Mre D Taylor, .. ,..,,7,., , ' 1 :: direotYoVs. - The hair moat be combed and brained thoroughly before the Tonic 1. eoDlied Then take A email atllf brn-b and apply the Toulc to Ihe acalp, being csr.fol that tha roou of tho hair ara perfectly saturated villi it N. B. Thla la to certify that noue ere genuine unite, aigntd ' 0.0. HILLTKB, for tale by B, B. Html, ana DingtMt. generally. marSH d2m (JbirtfJ. PERFECT FITTING SHIRTS ' ' "AT THB - BOSTON SHIRT FACTORY ! I. A. KIPPNEB, Ao'r, 10t ajtzth Sjt-, betwscn Vina and Race, (OHIO MIDIOAL COLLEGI BUILDING,) CINCINNATI, 0. Eelf-MeAiaramant for Bhlrta printed direction, aenl free everywhere, and ao eatty to uutUreland that any one oan take hie Own ttreaanrf for Bhlrta. I warrant A. good It. Thecaali tobepald to the VXCroe, Oompany "a n oelpt of aooda. prlu jyILDLSTOB, 8TB0BB1DOH 00., LITHOGRAPHERS, EtSGHA-VBrtw COPPER PLATE POINTERS, 4 West Fourth St., Clrelnnatl. All kind, of worn dona In the best it? le and on abort notice: . . . Particular Attention will na grren to ortitae tur WEDDING CARDS, VISITINa CARDS, to oyar Order, may be aent to tha JoCkBU Orric-norlMIr Medical. IW MEDICAL DI80OVIRT, for tbs spoody and permanent cure of aonorrhto, Gleet, U re thai Discharges, Seminal Weakness, Nightly Emissions, Inoou-' - tlnenoe, Genital Irritability,-Gravel, Strioture, and. AFFECTIOHS OT TBS KIDNEYS AND BLADDEB, vhlcta hu ben used by upward, of ( OKU UVMORW PHYSICIAN Sf : In their private practice, wttta entlrfi snebww, itrptynetitiig Oabflbif Coptalba, 0paQMt or u7 compount) hitherto knowii. BELL'S BPECIFIO PILLS arm needr In action, often eftotlnK care In a ftw Atn, tnd when a care Is effected It li permanent, Tbey ara prepared frPJB Tegetabl eztrants that ara harmlMi on the tystem, and never naufteato the ntumach, or Impregnate the breathi and belns suirar-euated, all namteoua .taste Is Totded. iVo flfcdwff of dit it nectvmry uhiltt mMnfthm; .or doe. their action Interfere with buainea, pnranlti Bach boicontaina ell doeen pill,. FBIC1 OKI DOLLAB, ndwfll beaantbymall poet-paid by anyalrartlaad Agent, i.roceiptof the money, bow by uruggl.ta gereraiiy. none genuine Wltnont my eitsuatare uu .ue wiwin X. BOANLAN 00., Wholoaale Agonta, Cincinnati. For aale by FX. Wllaon, S. B. Bamuel. tfc Oo., and Bob trte s Bemnela, Oolumbna. auguoeonij r ' r Bank Note Eugravlng. A UXBIOAH BANK NOT! CO., (Bouth-eait uorner maid ana ronrta otreeM,i 01NUINN ATI, OHIO. ngraTed la a atyle oorreapondlng In exoellenoa to that Bank Notoe, Ballroad and Connty Bond., Bill, of Ei- ahMie, Chaoka, Srafta, OertHcatee of Block and Da-eoalt, 8eol.,CarA), Ao Ac The above office u under ne tnipam.ion 01 Q.T.JOBM, aatlS-dly , ... ... fllnoinnatl. GEORGE W. GEORGE, Wholeaale Commlailon Dealer ' " ' '' IB BOOTS ; AND .SHOBS- Goods at Eastern ManuPrs Prices Warehonae, . Ha. 10, Wnlnmt , Steeet 'a - :i t (-7 1 . , ..CINCINNATI,.. marldlliTi WSC, EC. TjTJSXil, MABDrAOTDBIB OF -'"'' . Awnings, Tents and " Hops: Ho. Central Avenue, OlXA.olUXXCe.tl, OXxlOe A WSINOS AND TBNTS Fl'RPIfSllKD JX at lee. than Eaitern prlcea. ALL WOBB. WAB BANTED. Order pnnetnally attended to. wterH.tn. ' - f - - ' ' A. BROAD aTllEET RE8IPKNCJB. ' mH AT, OBIlttABLH UDVtBAIID LOT X .Una ted ou the uortheeat corner of Breed and Seventh etrerte la foraale uneaay etaoefpwyiaeal.-fhe lot I, TO feet oa Hro mI at net by l!uo on Seventh, and la piobably the meet daelrable retieene. property for aale In tie ouy.j j appiy to ' B. B. BEHSOrf, aprt Johneou Bolldlny.- -.' " HHKRT eTRAAH, :"V Btweery aael Provliloa Store. Bo. W Baal Towa atreet, aaaaaS .. .. - n fcdd'iM 1 . iNM.ittllcaf fatinfr-l-s.! ' i 'i . '"" ' "" ' " ; "T...".r ' r -'TnTi tilC'.n " I " " ' , "" HarvVwU'e.. ; KITHOFF, JONES ICO.;- WHOLES AL , AND RITAU, .DEALERS W 7w 1 iroaBioa Aao'DoaaaTto "' 1V:: HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, Irwm, ateel, Tim Ftataa, Cwnaer, ' MBOKAIOB' TOOL Z Agrleiiltorsl ' Inplenents, . BVILVM&B BAMDWAtM, BELTINQ, ' relattv Otts, .VMaUt , M.TK See ASoutlx Blib Jatreet, OLTJMBTJSi O.'-y:'- 4 Bfusic. Etc; OmOSSRINO PIANOS All Rtjles: and frees ' And aart naas and fold ttrer ' 98.000 INSTRUMENTS. .. Theee Inatrumaate have all the , Reiki ImproTementeT or the Are. And are, beyoaul oomperleon, th. .. Finest Piuos in tke World, Particular ettenlloo to reqoeated to BBVEBAI. -1 aa W a. A W tanhv. , I. 0. WOOSB. Sole Agml for Omtrtl OUt, Baokeye Blook, Broad Street, Columbia Saa-SA-I eo-eiy , . . Eprlnr Trade, 1863. l. I am now receiving a new and choice itock of ' FANCY DRY COO DO ;; ". t HOOP SKIRTS y ;:i : i i H NOTIONS, 4t. In all of whloh Noerlor Indnoemente will be offered oaeb buyers. t . ..I m ' 1 ADAM EPPLY, 1 ' ' i : ' ; Mo. to Pearletreet, ' lartB-eodSm Bet. Main S.Waiaut. ClnolnnalL Fnra. a t:C fUST BIOIIVID, AT . (..I 1 -. No. 99 South HigiV Street : . ... : .,. ;t .- : , J tf , A Large and BpWndid Aaaortnieot Zj JSk. D X H m 1 Oouutting of MINE, ' MOUNTAIN MARTIN, ' " ' ; FITCH, AND ' FRENCH SABLE . ' : a VIOTORINEB, MTJFFS AISTD OUPPS. AX80, REAVER AND OTTER GAUNTLETS. rULl. BBTTd AT FltOBf TO tlOO. Ttaoee goode are of extra quality and are warranted. ' Ludltta ere InvltAd to cell end etcumino theee AOod.. aa- anted that they will be well repaid for their trouble. , .. 4. a. Dei i u, nov22-eng2adflm : . . Bo. 99 South High St. Drug, Ac. s. It, No. 85 South High Street, (AKRItlOANBOTSL BU1LDIK9,) Wholes am aid Rataii Dialbb i DRUQ8, MEDICINES CHEMICALS, .... Fatbts, Oils, Dtb Srotts, 1 PERFUMERY AND FANOY ARTICLES, PoBI LlQDOEl I0B MeOIOIVAI PuBPOSEI. Thankful for put fever,, I rerpectfnlly aollclt a abate of our formor patronage, , Good, dellrered to any part or the city rae of chaxga. 1 deotu-dly 1 . , . . Bdoobso 10 Roberts & Samuel. No, 24 North High Street, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL " DEALER IN ' Medktibbb, Chemicals,' OrB-Srom, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES : WUTDOW OlASI ABB QtASSWABB, ... . PERFUMERY. Ae, . 1' , O'PhvneimJ PrtxripHor carihtUy pounded at aU ;flurd.i ,1 .-,: tj :,i 1 .15 ueoHl ' - : 3D H. eT. H. O V L 52 1-2 East Fifth Street, v , .rf-r . ! ' CINCINNATI, ;. , . ,1: OKea hi. rutin Hate aad Meat ta the care ofdln.ea of aha .. , ?' wri.k . n.H end asnerleaoe of many teare la Ca non, net can a.B Wltn eeeureiuwe v r - - e - -..,.!,.. jMre,,nne in the .ncceeetul treatment or aieeaeee or tnat op' 1 " like time to the rare of PRIVATE DISUSES, he pro re. laea curve la the neat obetlnaM1 OMea. Woae ivcently oontraotrd are eurci In a very abort time. Syphilis In Its primary ateeroa cured la aa Incredibly abort ttme. Skin aieeaaas et-.rea raavtafleoiu. . weeke. Alao, atter.da to the practice ol: the proteaal n - p.Mnna at dleteuco. afllted, wilt have ad. vloe end medldne .bat by tending description1 of die, nee and their eondltlon. All ex,m.unlcatloM11 and iret out elrlctlj confldenllal. Br. R. baa a TBDSS, which, from Its mecnanicai enjovctnena, wi e1 altlmately vler to the para, aalrd, ao aa to enable par-anna to follow their ordl nary evocation, without hindrance or lnooovenlence,. Unanll or addren , 1 'marS-dawly a Mo. i!Baat Fifth at. Oineinnatl.- TjTgT hood I 'how lost 1 now natsToRKDi ; oil Pulluhei, in e Seated BnvcUp. " Prfa B.Cfs ;: " a LBOTTJBl OH TBI - " ' NATURE, TREATMENT 4 RADICAL. CURE -Of apermatotTflOM or Bemlnal Weakness, Involuntary Xmlealone, Bexaai veonitr en. . u .- t.net-ally, Mervouaneea, Conaumpllou, P'lepsv and File; Vhvalcel inoanncltv. teaultltta rrtttimelf abnea, Ao. By Bobart J. Oalvarwail, At. a). Author of the aaggeaa Book,'.' ask s 1 ..t.o.v ddi -,,.-,A sMSt da Tsuiataaetda as imBaTara," erit under seal, In a plain envelope, Ve any address, feel MM, ea receipt 01 sut eeaie, or tea swage Kempe, ., ; . i DB OH. d 0. XLlrJl, 1JT Bowery, New York, Foot OBeo Box, 4MS. , apruMAwSais - , -' TBLEartAPnio news Moralnff and Afternoon leport L A T E AM D IMPORTAN THE W. Sf. MEBCER'8 TI8IT TO RICH LATEST FROM FORTRESS Of ON- .,- . .ROEl 'v.-. About the Rumored Surrender of .. IVew Orleans)! GREAT EXCITEMENT .o . ... ; .-,. FOLK. .. 1ST NOR- .. i. Ttaey are Looking for a Tlslt from hu.: r, ., vBaraaiaet . . . . u V - - ' - LATEST SOVTIIEUIV NEWSl i FIOIIT NEAR IIARRISOKBl'RG! FROM THE MOUNTAIN DEPAT- MENTt , GEN. FREMONT AND THE G17ER. RILLASt - eVC, AC., Ac, Ac. About M. Mercler'H tlslt to Rlcli- mond, Nsv YoiK, April 28. The Washington Star says it la not only true that M. Mareer, the Frenoh Minister, did not see and converse with Dr. Lemoire, is Richmond, on the oooasioa of ., b, aii.th. his reoent trip into Richmond papers; out enoonragement for peiMvsranoe in their current insurreoiion, through Dr. L., as they also allege. But it is alao oertalnlj true that while there, he held no official eommunioation whatever with nor person exoeDt the Conguls of hid own (JoTernment and Norfolk. While 4hr, we learn he saw and conversed with many persons whom he had known in sooiely here, iuoluding Judiah P. Jienjaniiu, but his intercourse with them, one and all was wholly of an unofficial character. . -.. From Fortress Monroe. - Fobtbssb Moitaor, April 28. A boat con taining four black men and one white man ar rived here tbie morning from Portsmouth. They report that the Merrimae will come out soon. A dispatch in yesterday's Richmond papers, received by a flag of truce, dated Mobile Friday, says ths Union ganboats passed forts Jaok-aon and 8b Phillip at 4 o'clock Thursday morn-' log, aod-al o'clock the seme day were before New Orleans , ' A rumor was current in Norfolk, last ninht. that New - Orleans had surrendered.' But few troope were at Norfolk or in the. vicinity of it. It waa rumored that Com. Tsrnall bad been removed from the command of the'Merrimao. Special to the If. T. Times.1 " j It Is slated by contrabands that ths most in- tenss sioitemsnt exists around Norfolk, and they have great fear of hu atlask by Burnside. Nearly all the troops have gone to South Mills to repol any advanoe that might be made. UontraDanus stats that the new prow on the Mcrrlmao is twelve feet long, of wrought iron ana stesi, potntea. . ; -;, : Many oittgens of Norfolk are leavins. The fall of New Orleans is eencedei by every one, u 1 ia, ' 1 1 .. -w v. Southern News, ' - New Yobk, April 28. A letter from Edisto Island, 8. C. 18th, reports a brilliant uff.iir on St. John's Island, resulting in Ihe total route of 200 rebel cavalry, by about VO of onr men. Ihe puny oonsisicd of Capt. Khiud, Dr. BriU nail, Masters Mate, Nelson, 80 'men and a how-luer ftoia the United gunbo.it Crusader, and 80 men from the 47th New York, 65th Penneylva-nia and Si New Bampshlro Regiments, under Capt. Dow, of the latter regiment. ihe rebels lost eoout ou Auiea ana wouuaea. No one on our side was killed. , ! . SitlrmisIUnff near Harrlsonbury. HAaaisosBoao, April 27. Yesterday after noon the pickets of Col. Donnelly's brigade, eta-tinned ain-ht miles henoe. on the UordoDuvllle Road, were attacked by a large force of Ashby's rear guard au driven baoK. uoe man was killed and three others wounded. The reserve of the 46th Pennsylvania and a eeoUon of Hampton's battery then advanced and repulsed the rebels. Tbey retreated 10 the woods, where several of our shells were ucca lo buret ia their very midst, and a wagon was seen gatberlfg up and carrying off their dead and wounded. Uwing to tne Daa state 01 .me roaus, vunneuy has been oiderSd to take . up a new position nearer the town until ths roads get better. From the Mountain Department. . ,-, (Special to tha N. T. Timoa.) Wheelibo. April 27. The combined move ments ordered by Gen. Fremont against the guerillas In Webster county, have proved eminently euooessful. Lieut. Lawson, with one detachment employed In this service, has returned, and others are returning. In a aevere running ngni 01 seven miles, Lawson killed 17 gueiillas and took 10 prisoners. ' ' The town of Addison, a small plscs, the only one in the new oounty, being deserted, was burned; It had been a guerilla haunt. A formidable organiiation in Braxton, Webster and adjoining oounties, is entirely destroyed, the leaders proposing to surrender. It is understood the guerillas taken will bs promptly shot. Oen. Milroy's soouts oa tbe 23d last, attacked tlie reur guarti of the enemy, ten miles oast of the Shenandoah mountain, the boundary of this department. They killed one Lieutenant and two privates, and captured a Lieutenant and one private. None of our men were hurt. The rebel oonscripts are deserting in large numbers; swearing Unionism and .returning horns. - , Reports from Staunton say the enemy s sloX and wounded, and large train, of soldiers are neaetni, nnjitward bv rail. Bnow fell 18 inohes deep at Monterey, on the 24tb Inst 1 Pbilapelpbia, April 27. Mr. Crump for mors than a quartsr of a oentury oonnected with the prese of this city, principally at tached to the Inquirer, died this forenoon at bis residence in Camden, ...-.,. St. Joint's, NiwrotmnnASB, April 28. Ths steamship North American from Liverpool April 17in, via Londonderry April 18th, passed Cape Race Sunday, and was boarded by the news yacht of the Associated Free', and a sum. mary of the news obtained. The Great Eastern bad been get off the gridiron at Milford in safety. Provisions quiet and steady; Consols closed oa Friday at D3,9i for .money., , . f f . 1 at 1 t . KsWABEE, 111., April 28. A fire here yesterday destroy sd six stores. Loss $12,000; insursd $6,000. . , . . r . - ;.; - New Yobs, April 28. The steam gunboat Connecticut arrived from tbe South .West Pass on ths 12tb. . - t . Ths Connecticut brought sick aad wounded seimen from the squadron. When she left the Mississippi, all the ehlpe of the expedition to New Orleans were insids the Passes, and had their dcoke sanded, ana were already for ao. lion. . ...... . .; ' Adams' Army Eiprcia Company carried over $430,000 North, yerterdsy, In various sums, be ing the contributions 01 soiaiers to tnsir families. This enormoue sum was oontalned In over 6,800 paroels. Such Is Ibe responslbilty, promp-tituts and dispatch of this immense company, that every dollar of the above sum will teach its consignee within ten or fourteen days at ths farthest. This is doing business oa a msgntn-oent soale, and is only one of many suoh operations that they undertake. What tbey do, is well done. fwitrn iVooresilJt. ' - Rebii Spies. A correspondent of. ths Bath Times, who is with ths army In float of York-town, says lhat about ten days ago Lieut. Swan, ef Ihe 7th Malae, end William brown of Brunswick, bugler in the . same regiment, lost their way and wero taken by the rebels, who look their slothes and passsd all through- our lines, gaining valuable Information.' Negroes have been seea among the rebels, Hi lag upoa us. - , 1862. - . Abont the Battle-Plcty Forget-- ten-Tbe Bold Shout, the Bully a Silent- ' ;"." - - ' t A correspondent 9 the Loulsrllle Journal, speaking of tbtj Bhllob bsttls, says:) ' .. ',' ' " I see la th Cineinnstl .times statement !htt Basil's army crossed Ihe river aad march ed up the Dana- t siuace. , 00 me contrary marohed ap from the boat wilh colors flying, and the bands playing, and during Us hottest of tbs Bght onr Esoelsior band was playing list sat sf the Wilderness." . It is true that ihesa are little things, : but Ultls things show ths spirit aad determination of any army. It is almost impossible for man who has stood one or two Tolleys to show the "whit f,iher," as there is as much danger in retreating as la advancing, and it Is wsll kaowo that in hun dreds of instances, espsoially when opposed to artillery, ins roar or a column haa suttered any percent, more than the aduaec; nor is this strange, vksn wa sonsider that most artillerists fire too hijb, and their . aim is always to eat down to sdranoe. But it is the battle-field wblok tries men's soule j it is ths dread tottery of life and deaib. True, man has about one ehanee out of a hundred of being uninjured, bat the uncertainty of that ehanae, aad - tke certainty that death ia swelling somc,ibegets a strangs feeling in tbs fcsart, too) as for Christianity, after the 4 ret easting ef the eye to Heaven ia secret prayer, is 1 s forgotten. Mar. seem unlike themselves in looks and in actions; tke most quiet become Ihe most loud and boisterous, while your bully, your fisticuff rowdy, beootaea pale and quiet, and ahows that bs would gladly run if fas dared) euoh and so various are the nature, of men in tattle. Aa' Unpublished Incident of the Great ' .. ... Dattle. ; Among Ihe wounded brought from Pittsburg, and placed in the Fourth stieet hospital, was an offioer in the 2d Iowa regiment. lie relates with more vividness than our pan can command, an encounter in tke great battle whioh has not yet been published. 1 . , . Ths offioer wes wounded on Sunday. On en- 4erri.n5 v "i ww: Tii u m made himself as com fortable as possible, and lay there patiently awaiting tha arrival of friends lo oarry him away. - Monday morning, he was surprised to find that hs lay between the contending armies. On one aids of ths ravine, a Union battery was planted, and on Ihe ether, a rebel one, each supported by denee masses of Infantry, Both batteries opened fire, and for hours, the shot and shell Sew thick and heavy over him. He lay so near the rebel battery, that he could not only see their movements, but hear their commands Ths shots of the Union battery were very effective, and a Oeneral offioer, whom he supposed to be Beauregard, declared It must be taken at all haiards. . - .... He seleoted foe that purpose a brigade oom-. posed of Louisiana and Texas regiments. These troops were all uniformed, soma of them very handsomely, and the regiments have very gorgeous banners. Hs judged them at onoa to bs orack regiments, ao heard Beauregard address them, telling them that a great deal depended on their taking that battery, that tbey could and must do il, and that If they returned without occupying it, they ebould be disgraced. The eiders were received by the entire brigade, and they moved off with the sieady tramp of vstsrans. There was a moment's lull in the fire of the national battery, but It was only to ("substitute oanieter for ehelL The next moment the guns belohed forth an inoessant fire, and the oanister raked the advanoing columns. Whole platoons were shot down, but still the biigads advanced., Ths murderous firs increased. Dead and wounded lay piled up iu great heaps. The column staggered. , An effort was made to Close up the gaps that the oanister constantly made in the column. . The shattered column had readied a point near where our wounded heroes lay, when, unable to stand tbe deadly Are, the remnant broke and ran, leaving the whole side of the ravine .covered with their dead and wounded. . ', . The National oommtudersaw the advantage of the movement, and immediately ordered hu adrunoe of his infantry.: In a moment the column leaped from behind the battery, and dashed down the bank of the river with a yell. Then up hill they moved on the double quick, and wilh bayonets fixed, jumped over the killed and dying. Bofore a mluute had elapsed, they were upon tbe rebel battery, which they captur ed entire. Our line was immediately advanced to opposite the eide of the ravine, and soon after our informant was oarried from the Bangui-nsry field. . , .. .. "It was a grandly terrific encotacle." said he. in oonolusion, "and I do not regret my wound, as it enabled mo to be a silent .witness of the enoouoter." Cin. Timti. . . r . ... , , -. FROM GEN.. MITCHEL'S OITIS- W- b..a .,,, ,, Advance Into DixieCapture of Huntsvllle and DecaturLtirgc Amount of Property . Taken Important , Dlhpatchcs from Beauregard Intercepted. . Ue- . ' From Corraepondonoe Ciqolnnatl Gassfe. ''L' FatettaVili.e, TennV April 10, 1862. ' A little further' into Dixiel. Oa Tuesday, at 3 o'clock, p. m the . 8th Brigade, Col. Torohln commanding, took up' Ihe line of march for Fayettevtlle, the county seat of Lincoln county. Yesterday morning the remainder of the division followed, the lftb Brigade (Col. Ly tie) bringing up the rear: Some of Ihe enemy's scouts who were here yesterday evening fled at the approach of onr forces. : I toll you, a few days ago, that the rebel Lieutenant, O'Brien, who ' aooompanied the Brownlow party to Nashville, and had ever sines been loitering within our lines, was ordered to leave rjneioyviue at onoe, by uen. Alitche). ' lie somehow obtained leave to remain until yester day, when Col. Young, belonging to the Seces sion army, wno nan neen sick sinos going to Nashville, but was now ovnvale9eont, was ordered airuy. Oen. Mitchel sent them off in a carriage, with an escort and a fl.ig of truos, to cenduot them as far as they wished to be con ducted. Idem. H, Jonnson, of Kennett's Cav alry, was In command of ths escort When tbe party arrived at Fayettevtlle, Col, Young coolly diemlssed the escort, telling them that he did not wish tbelr services any further. But the most disgraceful portion of this Bterv remains to bs told, When ths esoort arrived at Fayetteville, it waa surrounded by a mob of the citizens of that place, who heaped upon our unoffending soldiers every imaginable Insult that sould be expressed In the African lingo, which these Secessionists universally use. Ths most opprobrious epithets wsrs applied, and the most insane threats nnnea at tneir neads, Col. Young and Lieut. O'Brien making no effort to restrain them. At last one or the scoundrels, consider- tne- himself licensed by Ihe forbearance of onr men, euvanoea to iicai. jonnson, look bold of his bsard, juiiea it, sna, wltn the grinning malice of a devil, exolalmed, "You're a speoi-mev of the d d Yankees they're sendinc down herr, are you?". ' It Is a matter of surprise that Lieut Johoson did not cat him down in hie traoks. . But he remembered that his mission was ons of peace, and determined to go to ihe very verge of human forbearance rather Iban cimmit any violence: ' After this outrage the bootlngs and revilings or the fayeltevllliana were redoubled, and the party were glad to take rcf Jge In an old hotel, where they remained during the night The next morning thej started baok toward Shelliyvtlle, and met the advanoing columns of cur forces, . Oen. Milchel was hlghty indignant when be heard of the outrage that had been committed upon his ling of truoe. fie rode rapidly into the town, and found a large number of the citizens assembled in the public square to witness the entrance of our army. 'People of Fajettevllltl" cried Ihe General, in a voico of thnnder, "you are worse than sav-agetl Even they respect a flag of truce, whioh you have not done. Yesterday, the soldiers whom I sent to your town on a mission of courtesy aed i mercy, were shamefully insulted In your streets, and It was you who gavs ths Insult. You ara not worthy to look in the faoe of honest men. . Depart to your homes every one of you, and remain there until I give you permission to coins forth!"' ' . ' i At ths oonolusion of this speeoh tbe skulking cowards scattered to their houses like frightened rata to their holes, snd to-day, the atmos phere of Fayetteville is unpolluted by the breath of traitors. .''.. Col. Harris, of ths 2d Ohio, has been appointed Provost Marshal of Faystlevtlle,' and haa established his office in tbe Court Houss. Ths town contains between 800 and 1.000 inhabitants. ', ' ' ' ' "..... ',. Before dosing this letter,! wish to mention an Instsncs ef personal daring of which I have just heard. Corporal Pike of Company A, 4th unto uavairy, is a nstea soout, wnoss exploits, U thee were wctis", would probabl surpass , 1.' i'liYiwjT iu iiW.Valel) .a v.'j I 1 ,!. !,..! NUMBER 257. those of the bandit Morgan. Before our troon. reached F.y.tteville, h.'bad bee, tok? 55? rations throughout all the region ef owaatrv eorroundiog that tewr-He werTettrrning to. ward ebelby villa, oa iueedey mernlag, whas as met three wacons loaded with drivers informed him that the meat belonged to ths Confederate army. This was enough for t... uruenng utc taree teams to be driven abreast of each other, he took a number of rails, pleoed them under the wagons, set """" waiteij until rails, wagons. Rebel seeats wets the rlplnlty while Ihe opttrauva was going CB, A DSHLS. Ala.. Anrll lxtJa. IMS To-day I really feel lib. .,,.1,1.. ir. k... ainliieaasaa.1 aa, (.- . , . P IT.7i "T? wmen, auoougb bloodless, must be attended by sush Important results as a . V, ""siimatett.i m, miB lta and for all practical military purposes, the cnlu tins of communication between the Eae'tan weetera armies of the enemy is in our hands To General Mitchsll aad hie brav, & long the distinguished toner of being the first tfl1 Penetrate to the great Charleston and Mem-phis Railroad, and ths first to break through the rebel,' boasted line of defense, exteadiag from Chattanooga to Corinth. . The advance from Fayetteville ieHuatsTtUe was SkvSs with tbe fall expectation th,, at ,h, latter place there would be a terrible straggle Every one knew ths importance of the Charleston and Memphis ttsilroad to tha enema- ... cry one supposed that they would guard it with the utmost vigilsnos, and everyone predicted that the division of our army whloh ehould first reach it would be met with the sternest determination, and would obtain possession of this great ohannal of eommunioation onlw h. . costly expenditure cf blood. We all perfectly understand, too, that ths rebels had accumulated upon this read nearly all ths rolling stock of all ths railroads from Bowling Green south ward, uejisiuw wnat legitimately belonged to the road itself; and that they-coqld, therefore, with the utmost fuollity, concentrate at anw threat ened point whatever foroee thev had e.t mand. Ws did not know but Ihs rebel army of .ue Vbuujlg, ooaoluaiOeT SO aDenrtOK Virinle. and esoapieg from Ihs apparsntly "nerveless grasp" of MoClellan, would bs pouring in over- wueiiauug lumw aowu tne jsast Tennessee and Virginia Railroads, at ths very time when we should be advancing upon Huntsvllle. We oould not tell but that our main army in the neighborhood of Corinth would suffer some se rious reverse, in wnioh case ws were Inevitably But, la case ws should bs successful In ease we should break the enemy's famous line we knew how important would be theoonsequences. inere was no time for hesitation, and Gen. Mitohol is not ths man to hesitate, even if there were..- 1 . - ' The order to maroh from Fayetteville was received wilh pleasure a plsasure which was slightly alloyed with regret that we bad not uBMroyea tne town.- , ' - t- - , Col. Tarehin's brigade and Simonson'e battery started from Fayetteville, at 6 o'olook a. at, en Thursdsy, and march sd diligently nntil 9 0 slock p. m., whioh brought them to within eleven miles of Huntsvills. CoL Sill's brigade, with Loomte's famous bettsry, followed clossly, the ether brigades at a greater distance. A stsasg Union feeling waa manifested after we entered Ihs Stale of Alabama, hue. 1, . mingled with many false notions ooaeernieg State sovereignty, and the duty of submission thereto. One old gentleman, a nlantan. with an extensive estate, expressed the views ef the majority of ths people of Madison county. "It seemed like tearing out my heart," said hs, "to give up the old Union, but when Alabama voted 10 separate, I thought it my duty to sustain her." "But," I reminded him, "Alabama, ia attempting to break np the nation, did what ehe had ao right to do." "Ah," said the old gentleman, "passion and prejudice blinded our eyee to that truth." "Are you then willing, ' I ssked, "to see the authority r ih v.iu.ki Government, restored?" "Yes." ha : rmlieid. "and to pray from this time forth that aliher people may bs willing to return to their alleei- auce. .., x 1 1 , . 7 ,. The necrors lhat wo saw . vtA friendly, and generous and benevolent, evea mmr in actors were meet strongly Becesh Shortly after entarlne, tha Bum ....,l i!"" plantation of the Secession General, N. 1 . Walker. eXtcadlnir elene Ihe. mnmA -II.. Ibe mansion waa utterly deserted, and Ml the furniture removed. A perfect host of negroes oame down to see and to - weloome us. They laughed, they eang, they danced, In their glee. ! 1 stopped a moment to converse wilh them. "By golly," said a fine looking, honest young negro, "i's a great notion to go along with this crowd 1 wnat do yon say, messal" "My poor friend," (replied, "if you do, you - will probably be turned out of our lines the first nlaoe we en camp; somsbody who olalms yon will corns and lake yon Daok ; ana then, beside being severely punished for running away, you will ia every respeot bs worse off than before." The negro understood me. "It Is very hard, maaaa," said he. His voice faltered; I eaw lhat tears were gathering In bis eyes, and I rode away, as my own were growing moist ana aim. A detached house upon Oen. Walker's plantation was In flames . when I passsd. It had been set on fire by soms of our soldiers, but whether accidentally or not I did not stop to inquire One of the negroes had a heavy iron ring and bolt fastened to his leg. He said he bad worn them for more than three months. A cavalryman descended quietly from his horse, knocked off the fetters, fastened them to hie saddle, and rods away. "By Heaven," I heard him mutter, "I would forfeit a year's pay for tho privilege of transferring these to the legs of therasoslwho pnt them on lhat man!" Ths 8th brigade, CoL Turohln, with Blmon-son's battery, did not spend mush time in slumber Thursday night After four hours' rest they reoommenced their march, and reached Huntsvills at 6 o'olock on Friday morning. : An advenes fores of 150 cavalry, together with a seotlon of ths battery, in oharge of Capt. Simonson himself, assisted by Lieut M. Allen, commanding the seotlon, ths whole directed by Col. Kenaett, first caught sight of Huntsvllle and the lovely cedar surrounding it They wers advancing upon the douHc-quick, when two locomotives, with trains attashed, suddenly made their appearance upon Ihe railroad. They were moving In the dlreotion of Stepheneon. A shot from ons of Simonaon's guns brought the first ons to. The Captain then turned, to pay his respects to ths ths second. A shot or two induced it also to haul np. In ths meantime, the encineer of the first train waa quietly sottlne? on a full head of steam, and when nobody was suspsoting suoh a thing, he suddenly started off. The cavalry went in pursuit, and actually ohassd the looomctlve for a distanoe of ten miles. A few horsemen tried their carbines upon the second train, and an unfortunate colored person received one of ths bullets In his neck. It was said, too, by Ihs Seoesh, that a rebel from Corinth, going home slightly wounded, was instantly killed. I am aot certain whether this is trus or not. 1 presume, however, that i tie. j The infantry had come up while this was going on, and Col. Mlhalotxi, or the 24ih Illinois, sent a detachment to tear up a portion of the track in Ihe direction of Decatur. The escape of any mors trains was thus effectually prevent. ea. " ' : Three oavalrymen rushed into the- town, found a large number of rebel soldiers sleeping in and around a number of cars, and actually made prisoners of 170 men, including a Major, six Captains, and three Lieutenants. : The most of these fellows belonged to the 9th Louisiana Regiment, and were on their way to join It in V-rglnia. The Major's name waa Uavauaugh. His regiment did not all re-enliat when their term of servioe (one year) expired, and he had been home for reoraits. Hs had suooeeded in obtaining 140, and was taking them to ths Old Dominion to fill up the ranks of his regiment. When he found lhat both himself and hie recruits wsrs prisoners in tho hands of ths Yan kees, his mortitioailou was visibly expressed all over his countsnanos. ' J. When our troops advanced into tbe town, they found they had made a prise of seventeen locomotives (sixteen of tbsm in fine vanning order), and about 160 cars, passenger and freight. I shall not attempt to enumerate the other articles oaptured, and your readers may estimate ths valus of the rolllng-stook. - - ... The prisoners oaptured are a wretched look ing eetof men, and evidently belonging to the loweet elasa of Southern society which ia, I admit, patting them down pretty low. They are nearly all sick of the buslaess in which they are engaged. Many of them say they were forced to enlist; others admit that they .wore Influenced by leaders whom thsy believe to be bad men; and there is scarcely one who does not regret that he was indussd to take op erase against the Government. One of them told me that if he were home once more he would die in his traoka before he would again 1 consent to tight against the old Union- "I foolishly thought' said hs, -"that I was fighting for my country when obeyed Ihe mandates ef sir. j -o ..ti h c;." tVj.ii t t-jii bivui Coloael Turehla has occupied Decatur. "A WrT-hi0;"0" b!'", oSimonsoa'abat-hir.7-A'uW"t bd "se from here 'eti. Blgna. haa been re. taken e.u.ii.i.. - Z'J.?" mria "he eeuntry in every dlreeUoB. General Mitehel'e diviad. I. VIZ mSJl -VtT f?1,,,r1th,ln 1 " wr,' ' I Blast ef it all. atlaeimie 1. . . . , . x win ia le BetlaalBc to flow ia ui n.i ?t, ' t-reme of tha MhaliiAB le .Ku,i a 1 . r . . w. a.wiagto 0100. . ,, i. ... . " -Dioatop.au, April 14. ; I ea tM Dewetar, heoeuBtv aeataf li..m.. oounty, and having (Tnlghed mybusinees there, l am Wailine? farm, train of eaea ,n . -k ... l. DeOeMOtf ia, a. favflavl tnmn ds.i.!.:.. .w a -: eight hundred inhabitants, the most of whom ere deeply Infected with tha madness af aeoee-sIob; aotwlihstanding, when Alabama Toted to go out of the Union, Limeatone county gave majority of two to eae la favor of loyalty and peacs. Tha towns in this part of the country an teem to have been little centers of disaffection, la which the doctrinae of itaufi, a re, ob tained a foothold, and whence they were gradually diffused throughout ths surrounding country. In each of ths towns, especially ia the county towns, wss a knot of third or forth, rats demeeoernaa. arhn enakla n .K..1. -.-i tioa in a time ef quistnsssand neaee. honed that the whirl and surge of revolution might elevate them above the heads of their fellow -tuia. Their calculations wore not altogether inoorreot. The masses of ths Southern people are very liable to be deceived by a tonguey politician; and ' thess frothy, gassy soamps have, as a result ef "' .uv .euviuuu, mowuy oDiAineo tne piaoee ana the notoriety which thev novated. But thev era . . really the moat cowardly portion of Ihe South ern people; aad, as the columns of the Union army advance, they universally fly before the storm they have themselvee conjured np, and leave the poor, duped, deluded massss, to suffer the ooasequenoes of their leaders' crimlnslitv ' and thslr own folly. Thus It has been in every town wa have as yst visited in Alabama or Tennessee. Tbe peo ple see how they have been betrayed; tbey neartuy curse their betrayers; aad yet, so dsep- ly are they under the influence of tha falaa. nooas ana eopniems 01 ineir leaders, that many of them eurss ths lattsr and ths National Gov-ernment in the same breath. Decatur was first occupied by the 24th and two companies of Ihs 19th Illinois Regiments, ' wuiuii, wttn a ponton or oimonson s Dattery, left Huntsvllle ' on a train of cars Saturday morning last, reoovered a picoe of oanncn whioh naa been lost the nlgbt before, and proceeded onward to Ihe Tennessee River. One object of the expedition was lo burn Ihe bridge over the Ten- ' " ntsaee at Deoatur, ia order to prevent our being assailed by a foros from ths neighborhood of Corinth. But the fight near there on Monday had renderod the rebels as fearful of an approach from ths east as ws wsrs of a move- ' ment from the west, so that when Cole. Turohin and Kennett, who commanded the expedition, arrived at ths bridge, they found that it had been fired by the rebels themselves. . Deciding instinctively that it was always-proper to do just ihe opposite of what theee """ sooundrels wsrs about, our leaders wisely determined, instead of burning the bridge, to put out the flames which the rebels had already . kindled.- This was done in a twinkling; and our gallant fellows, horse and foot, rushed, through the town to asssll a body of mounted rebels who thsy understood were enoamped there. But the bird wee flown. , Col. Bell, with - j a battalion of cavalry, had been there, but the . . first faint and distant rattle of Ihe train had . sent him and all his command flying belter- '' ekelier toward Taaoumbla, leaving tents, pro- ' visions, sabres aad every thing, except their . . precious earoasses, behind them, "Golly, mas- , sa," said an old Ethiopian to me, a few hours, ago, "Golly, massa,- I've seed fast races afore, hut ai-tie nvlhinn, In tnn.l flatt" ... ----- -j..-D --,-- - Bince we have learned that the rebels ia the . violnity of Corinth will have no troops 10 spare . for Ihe purpose of assailing at, we are all heartily glad that the bridge at Deoatur was saved. ' It is a magnificent structure, and has, . ever sines he erection, been an object of pride lo the r people of , North Alabama. . As matters now ., stand, its talus to us will bs incalculable. The negroes - were gathered- in masses all along the road. As the ears passed ihey bow- ed, they scraped, they grinned, they puilea off , - tneir nats, ana in every way tried to aeoure a , recognition from those whom they considered : their friends. Occasionally a generous hearted ' soldier would:, wave his hand or flourish his-sword Id them, aod then their ohild-like manifestations of delight literally knew no bounds., Whenever the train stopped the colored peo- -, pie would ollmb on board, and beg 10 be taken along. One eed, earnest' faoe peeped into tbe '"' door of tho ear In which I was sitting, and its ownsr put up the usual petition. "Get dawn," said ah officer on board; "get down and go to , your master; we cannot take you." The slave shuddered at lbs word ''master." ' "O, fords " good God's sake," said he, "let me so wid you and wait on you all I" There was a pereepil- , ble tremor in tbe officer s voice as he repeated his command lo Ihe negro, and I saw that a tear waa stealing down the' cheek of a rough-dragoon, who sat upon a seat just opposite to me. . On Sunday, Lieut. Bhoemakor. of Comoinv H, 4lh Ohio Cavalry, went Out on a reeonnoiter-ing expedition, with a small eqoed of men, and about fifteen stiles -west of Deoatur, oame upon j sixteen of the enemy's cavalry. Tbe latter Immediately fled toward a swamp, and, dismounting, lsft their horsee and plunged in. thinking. of oourse, that our men would be silly enough to parens thsm on horseback. But Lieut. Shoe- ' maker ordered hie own men to dismount, follow--ed the rebels olosely on foot, hilled one, oaptured-five, and returned with his prisoners and a dcien extra horses to oamp. , Torktown Items. (Cor. M.T. World.) '..'. 1 ' '.' : Camp Scott, Aprill9. The Rebel Force.-It has alrsady been attempted by those whose motives at beBt are eutploious, to create an impression abroad among the people that the force in front of Ihe army of the Potomao is purposely exaggerated by somsbody quiintabel Whatever may be the motive, it would perhaps open tneireyes ir tne. long line or cerensea now . stretching from ths York to the Jamen rivers were staring them in the face, as they do dally and nightly ths bravs army now encamped bo- - tore mem. . It ta now ascertained beyond doubt that the rebel forces are under the command of Generals Johnson, Lse and Magruder, whoss combined strsngth must bs bstween one hundred and - twenty and one hundred and fifty thousand men. , (150,000.) The disposition of this foroe probably is as follows: General Joseph E.John- ' acn oommanda ths oenter, defending the approach lo Richmond, with sixty thousand men; General J. Bankhead Magruder the right wing, facing to the rear and intrenohed at Yorklown, with fifty thousand; while General Robert Lee, , with a foroe of forty or fifty thousand on ths left wing, protects an attempt to eater Richmond by a flank movement on the extreme left If this bs the disposition of their foroee, the devslopmsnt of Oeneral MoClellan' s plans (always through same mysterious ageney rsveated to them) may necessitate a change In their tao tias. It was therefore the part ef a wise general to make surs first that hs should not be driven off the peninsula before he attempted to perform lhat operation on the enemy. It lo now' done, and although I am not at liberty to aay, what measures have been taken, yet I may pre-, diet that Yorktown muet surrender or be evacuated within a short time. It was neoessary to BTlng up ths siege trains to demolish the formidable works of the enemy. They have arrivw ad; how many and where they are I am not allowed to state. The lathabltaata v - - " 7 Far Ihe most part have no Idea of the struggle in which we are engaged. They are Simple.uuaf : feoied, and unedncated, and eanoot conceive ai y other then that contained in thejexpression oon-stantly reiterated, "we never harmed the North, why do they wish to dtroy our property." The Stale Government whioh alone hae ever had any direct eommunioation with them lor the gen-t ralgovernment heretofore has only dealt In its operations with States, and not the people is in their eyes Supreme ; or at least they do aot oonoelve of any greater power, therefore In all their conversations they refer not to national, or Union tronns. but Northern end Southern army defines their ideas of ihs merits of Ihe on lest. As for treason, iney nave no more laea that they are guilty of it, or of what it is, than an unborn child. Ihe State auihorltiee pass laws and they obey. This does not apply, without exoeption, to all, but to the majority of the people who have remained here. ' Many have left their homes to join their fortunes with those of thslr friends, and Indeed none but old men and women remain. t nVf A private Utter, whioh oame by the Philadelphia from Key Weet to Captain Porter's son, whs is a lieutenant in the Ninety-first Regiment, states that seven of the bomb schooners aad three steamers had passed Fort Jaokaea in one Bight ' The asms Utter states, that one whole plantation of nig roes, numbering one hundred end fifty, cams down in boats, batteaus, Ac , to tbs fleet. They say that thslr master had abandoned their place and gone to - New Orleans. They are eery glad le get away, but protest stroagly against the fleet attempting to go farther ap the river, declaring lhatlhav will all be blowa to plsoee. - ' e ' . . . a . ... . -l 1. 1 ,., ( ;r n 1. L-i.'-t itets'l .-.I r i liiv t l , -i